Soaring Australia 2011-01

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Print Post Approved – PP225277/00002

ISSN 1832-4849


January 2011

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Clear Prop! Larry Jones

1 Clear Prop! 4 Coaching In Texas 6 Dehydration And Flying 7 GFA News 8 France On 25 Euros A Day 12 Coaching Under The Microscope 14 Thinking About Australia’s Sailplane Fleet – Part 2 16 The XX Files 18 Encounter At Lake GEorge 19 The 2010 South Australian Hang Gliding Championships 20 Narromine Cup Week 2010 21 The Narromine Cup As A Transition To Cross-Country And Competition Flying 22 Final Glide – Neville Barker 23 South Australian State Gliding Championships 2010 24 Interview: Kraig Coomber 26 HGFA News 28 Vintage Gliding Corner 31 Final Glide: John ‘Jack’ Manners Iggulden

39 Winch Versus Aerotow, Costs To Solo 40 Soaring Calendar 41 The Flylight Dragonfly: Towards A Balanced Investment Portfolio 42 SMS Implementation – Emergency Response Plans (ERPs) 44 Contact Addresses 46 Classifieds

32 What’s ‘Overdevelop’? 34 ‘Buddy’ Hang Checks And Pre-flights 35 HGFA President's Report 35 Vale: Craig Worth 36 Mt Beauty Gliding Club New Zealand Expedition 2010

Daniel and Brit Carlisle tandem at Rainbow Beach, November 2010 Photo: Daniel Carlisle

Official publication of the Gliding Federation of Australia (GFA) and the Hang Gliding Federation of Australia (HGFA). The Gliding Federation of Australia Inc. and the Hang Gliding Federation of Australia are members of the Fédération Aéronautique Inter­nationale (FAI) through the Australian Sport Aviation Confederation (ASAC). CREDITS Cover: Photo: Design: Printing: Mailing:

SparrowHawk serial number 19 (XIX) at Tehachapi, California Morgan Sandercock Suzy Gneist, Gneist Design Bluestar Print, Canberra ACT Bluestar Print, Canberra ACT

NOTICE TO READERS AND CONTRIBUTORS This magazine is a joint publication by the GFA and the HGFA and each association contributes 50% to the production cost and is allocated 50% of the content pages of each issue. Contributions are always needed. Articles, photos and illus­ trations are all welcome although the editors and the GFA and HGFA Board reserve the right to edit or delete con­tributions where necessary. Materials of unknown origin won’t be pub­lished. All contributions should be accom­panied by the con­tri­bu­ tor’s name, address and membership number for verifica­tion purposes. Photographs should be printed on gloss paper either in black and white or colour or submitted on CD. Drawings, maps, cartoons, diagrams, etc, should be in black ink on white paper. Lettering may be pencilled light­ly but clearly on the drawing, for typesetting. Views expressed in this magazine are not necessarily those of the GFA, HGFA nor the editors. They are strictly the views of the contributor. Any GFA officer quoting his title will be responsible for submitting an official article. Copyright in this publication is vested in the GFA/HGFA. Copyright in articles and other contributions is vested in each of the authors in respect of their contribution.

HGFA EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS The three contact points for HGFA members sub­mitting to Soaring Australia are the HGFA Sub-editor, the HGFA Office, and the Graphic Designer. These contacts should be used accord­ ing to the directions below.

GFA EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS The three contact points for GFA members sub­ mitting to Soaring Australia are the GFA Subeditor, the GFA Office, and the GFA Advertising Representative. These contacts should be used according to the directions below.

HGFA SUB-EDITOR HGFA OFFICE & SALES Suzy Gneist Ph: 03 9336 7155 Ph: 07 5445 7796 Fax: 03 9336 7177 <soaring.australia@hgfa.asn.au> <office@hgfa.asn.au> Post to: 57 Alice Dixon Drive, [www.hgfa.asn.au] Flaxton QLD 4560 4a-60 Keilor Park Drive, Keilor Park VIC 3042 GRAPHIC DESIGNER/PRODUCTION EDITOR Suzy Gneist, Ph: 07 5445 7796, <soaring.australia@hgfa.asn.au>, Post to: 57 Alice Dixon Drive, Flaxton QLD 4560. Articles HGFA members should send article contributions to the HGFA subeditor. Article text is preferred by email <soaring.australia@hgfa. asn.au> either as a Word document or plain text file, photos can be sent via post (57 Alice Dixon Drive, Flaxton QLD 4560) either as print copies or high resolution JPEGs or TIFFs on CD. Photos must be accompanied by full captions and photo­grapher names on a separate text file (.txt) on the CD. News, Letters to the Editor, New Products, Events Calendar entries HGFA members should send the above editorial items to the HGFA Sub-editor, Suzy Gneist, as text in the body of an email to <soaring.australia@hgfa.asn.au>. Classifieds, Club Executive and Member Updates HGFA members should submit classifieds (secondhand gear for sale) and changes of address, etc, details (whether for Club Executives or individual members) to the HGFA Office <office@ hgfa.asn.au>. See HGFA Classifieds section at rear of this magazine for more details. Display Advertising HGFA commercial operators wishing to place a display advert should email the Graphic Designer, Suzy Gneist <sgneist@ gmail.com>, to receive a booking form and detailed instructions.

GFA SUB-EDITOR GFA OFFICE & SALES Anne Elliott Ph: 03 9303 7805 Ph: 02 6889 1229 Fax: 03 9303 7960 <anne.elliott1@bigpond.com> <Secretary@sec.gfa.org.au> Post to: PO Box 189, [www.gfa.org.au]. Narromine NSW 2821 Level 1/34 Somerton Road, Somerton VIC 3062

HGFA WEBSITE CONTRIBUTIONS Email Club News to <clubnews@hgfa.asn.au>, Email Comp News to <compnews@hgfa.asn.au>. The information is for­ward­ed to Soaring Australia and the maintainers of the HGFA website.

GFA ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE GFA Secretary, Ph: 03 9303 7805, Fax: 03 9303 7960, <Advertising@sec.gfa.org.au>, Post to: Level 1/34 Somerton Road, Somerton VIC 3062 Articles, News, Letters to the Editor, Events Calendar entries GFA members should send article contributions to the GFA Subeditor, Anne Elliott. Article text is preferred by email <annell@ hwy.com.au> either as a Word document or plain text file, photos for articles should be sent in the post (PO Box 189, Narromine NSW 2821) either as print copies or high resolution JPEGs on CD. Photos must be accom­panied by full captions for each and photographer name. Classifieds & Display Advertising GFA members wishing to submit a classified should do so via the GFA Office. See GFA Classifieds section rear of this magazine for more details. Club Executive and Member Updates GFA members should send change of address, etc, details (whether for Club Executives or individual members) to the GFA Office <Membership@sec.gfa.org.au>. DEADLINE FOR ALL CONTRIBUTIONS: 25th of each month, five weeks prior to publication. Photos and materials will be returned after publication only if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is supplied. Otherwise, photographs, whether published or not, will be filed and may be used subsequently in further publications.

It was back in the mid to late 70s when a few local hang glider pilots first attempted to attach an engine and propeller to a hang glider. Both conventional flex wing and rigid wing hang gliders where tried. We had not yet discovered wheels, so all attempts were foot launch. My first flight in a powered hang glider was, I think, in 1977. It was a rigid wing hang glider known as an Icarus V. I had previously owned and flown an Icarus so was more than familiar with its flying characteristics; however, I had never flown a powered aircraft of any description before. January 2011

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ob Edgecombe was the owner of the Icarus and had mounted a Mcculloch 125 chainsaw engine with a small direct drive propeller. It was underpowered, noisy and inefficient, but it flew. As you bit down on the mouth throttle and started to run, each step would see your feet get dangerously close to the rapidly spinning propeller. I know of at least one pilot who was hit by the propeller and would have lost his foot if not for the skill of the surgeons who worked on him. Around this same time we heard rumors of pilots in England building a tricycle undercarriage with a seat, engine and propeller safely behind and of course with wheels there was no need to run. It sounded great! A fellow hang glider pilot, Ian Sweetman and I decided this was the way to go and started to put together a plan to build a trike. We used 16 inch kids bicycle wheels, a plastic Namco chair and a modified Victa 160 lawnmower engine. Ian hand-carved a 26 inch propeller that we mounted direct to the engine. The fuel tank was a water bottle from a VW Kombi windscreen washer unit. I sewed up a seatbelt on my mum’s sewing machine, we mounted a hang glider to

the completed unit and headed off to the Old Noarlunga airstrip and away we went. It was under-powered, noisy and inefficient, but it flew and we continued to fly it for a year or so. Another local pilot, Pat Finch, also built a trike and joined Ian and I for many early morning flights from a beach north of Adelaide. Hang gliding was in rapid growth and powered hang gliding was still somewhat of a novelty, however, stories of a few pilots interstate also building and flying trikes started to emerge and we attended a fly-in in Victoria, possibly over the Easter break of 1978, ‘79 or thereabouts and met up with a couple of other early trike enthusiasts. In 1980 I left the trike behind, jumped in the Kombi, pushbike on the back, hang glider and surfboard on the roof and a fridge full of Coppers. I soon found myself in Sydney and spent the next couple of years there teaching for Cloudbase Hang Gliding Centre and supplementing my income with some part-time work at the Moyes factory. It would be a year or two before I would next fly a trike. A weekend of flying in the Hunter Valley, possibly around 1982 or ‘83, saw me catch up with the Duncan brothers who had recently cobbled together their first trike. They used a modified Moyes hang glider as the wing and, if memory serves me correctly, a Robin engine with reduction drive and two-blade wooden propeller. It was the first powered aircraft I had flown that actually had power to spare and it leapt off the ground and surprised me with its willingness to climb. The Duncan brothers formed the company ‘Airborne Windsports’ and continued to develop their trike, I meanwhile left Sydney heading north in search of new adventures, meeting many great people and flying new sites all the way to Port Douglas. I had been away from home for a couple of years now and decided to return to Adelaide. Ian had retired our trike by this time, but the hang gliding community was still strong so I returned to teaching hang gliding in South Australia. By the mid-80s the Rotax engines became readily available in Australia and finally we had an engine that was purposebuilt for our application including a reduction gearbox. Airborne had continued to develop their trike and now coupled with the Rotax engine they had a product worthy to market. I believe the Rotax engines were a turning point in the

development of our sport, they proved far more reliable than anything we had previously used and finally pilots had the confidence to head off cross-country and start to explore this great country of ours. It was in the mid-80s that I purchased my first Airborne trike, the ‘Osprey’, a twoseat trike powered by a Rotax 447 and a Moyes built wing of around 220ft2. It was a great trike and flew many hundreds of hours without fault. The next trike I purchased was the Airborne ‘Buzzard’ a two-seater with a smaller, faster wing and a bigger engine; the Rotax 532. We used both the Osprey and the Buzzard to help teach hang gliding and completed some of our first successful aerotows behind the Buzzard. Towards the end of the ‘80s Airborne began working with sailmaker Alan Daniel of Wingtech to develop their own wing and this they coupled to their latest trike base and the ‘Edge’ was born. The first few Edge’s had the Rotax 532, but this was soon replaced with the new dual ignition 582s. Airborne began the long hard task of certification and with the promise of two-seat trikes becoming legal in Australia, interest was growing. I had several keen students and at least three of them were willing to commit to the sport, so I placed an order with Airborne for three Edge trikes. Around this time a few of the English-built Pegasus trikes found their way to Australia and with the importer, Mike Coburn, advertising these and Airborne pushing their new Edge, we were about to see a rapid growth of trike pilots. By the late ‘80s early ‘90s you could find a microlight in all states of Australia and with a bit of luck a person to teach you to fly it. The sport was growing and we needed to formalise a training syllabus and set some standards to ensure those who were teaching were doing so in an appropriate manner. The HGFA put its hand up and with the help of volunteers like Chris Brandon and a number of others, we held our first national instructors conference in 1991. This first instructors’ conference was very successful and finally we had certified two-seat microlights, certified instructors and certified training facilities. Follow-up conferences in subsequent years also proved beneficial and we now had approved schools and instructors Australia-wide. Throughout the ‘90s Airborne continued to develop their product and the Edge gave way to the Edge Executive

First trike we built back in the late 70s

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(Edge E) and was available with Rotax 503 or 582. Further developments saw the introduction of the Edge X series trikes and for the first time a choice of wings. The Edge wing was discontinued and we now could choose either the slow and forgiving Wizard wing or the faster Streak wing. John Goodrich took over the Pegasus dealership and imported container loads of the new Pegasus Quantum which proved popular here in Australia for a period of time. During the ‘90s we saw instructors come and go, schools set up to with much fanfare, only to close again after coming face to face with the realities of running such a business. A weather-dependant sport requiring patience and a diverse set of flying, teaching and business skills is not an easy way to make a living. Still some schools prospered, networked and learnt from each other, offered what the customer wanted and ultimately survived and are still operating to this day. It was a new millennium and we were reading more and more stories of group flights and/or solo adventures in and around Australia. Pilots were loading their trikes and heading into remote parts of the country, landing out and camping in the great outdoors. Many of the overseas trikes now offered the Rotax 912, a smooth, quiet four-stroke engine offering power, reliability and best of all a modest fuel burn. Airborne followed the trend and by 2004 the all new XT was available to the Australian market. More comfortable seating, bigger fuel tank, better suspension, better instruments and a faster, better handling wing with the release of the Streak 3. Over the next few years further development of the XT series trikes would see the choice of Outback, Tourer or Tundra models. The choice of two or four-stroke power and the choice of Merlin, Cruze, Streak or the all-new strutted SST wing. Meanwhile I’d been following the development of a lightweight single-seat trike being built in England. Powered by a small single cylinder four-stroke engine it was smooth, quiet and used fuel at about two-and-half litres an hour. It was laid back and comfortable, had a retractable undercarriage and looked great. The wing was a purpose-built variant of the Aeros Discus and engine off performance was good, allowing for soaring flight. A perfect blend between hang glider and microlight; I had to have one. I took on the Australian dealership for the Dragonfly and by late 2008 January 2011

we saw the arrival of the first of these wonderful little trikes with another half dozen or so to follow. Now at the end of 2010, I think it fair to say that the microlight aircraft has proven itself as a worthy form of aviation. You can find them in almost any country in the world; indeed pilots have flown the humble microlight around the world. We started out over 30 years ago bolting a lawnmower engine on a hang glider just for a bit of fun and now there is an entire industry dedicated to building, testing, teaching and flying microlights. As we move into 2011, what will the next decade hold for the microlight industry? In general we’ve seen development over the past couple of decades lean towards faster more powerful trikes and, I guess, to a degree this will continue. I do think we will start to see some refinement of the mid-range trikes with trim speeds in the 45 to 55kt range, but there will always be a desire for faster and faster trikes. For me though I plan to slow down even more, and after over 30

years of teaching flying I will hang up the training bars this coming year and spend more time flying for fun. Out on the hang gliding hill again, I am enjoying the fine qualities of my Moyes Malibu, it is slow, it is easy, it is fun! When at the airfield more and more I choose to fly the Dragonfly, it is slow, it is easy, it is fun! I am sure we will see growing interest in this style of flying over the next few years and beyond. The above is little more than a brief look at the history of microlights here in Australia as I have seen it. The dates may be a little fuzzy and others may remember things a little different than me, but I think most will agree it has been a great ride so far. Tremendous lifelong friendships have been formed, great adventures have been shared. The range of microlights now available and the diversity of characters that fly them all go together to keep the industry strong, alive and growing. See you in the air!

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Coaching in Texas Shinzo Takizawa – Coach and Level 3 Instructor My good friend and Soar Narromine member, Bob, invited me to his home State, Texas, USA, in July last year for three weeks of soaring: two weeks of coaching and one week attending the Texas State Gliding Championships.

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he first two weeks were spent at Boerne Stage airfield, home of the Boerne Stage Gliding Club and my last week was spent travelling to and from the championship site at Llano airport, 120km north of Boerne Stage. At Boerne Stage my apartment was located on the airport, facing the runway. Evening beer time was spent relaxing on the verandah, watching business people returning in their private aircraft after a day at work. My transport was a Porsche, and every evening I dined at one of the top class restaurants scattered around Boerne Stage. Conditions were very humid and too wet; thermal conditions were not so good, being weak and low. However, because of this, it was the best coaching condition. Bob had already achieved a 500km flight, but this time he wanted a 750km one. Sadly, he couldn’t achieve this because of the poor conditions however he said he was “200% satisfied with the training.”

Analysing the weather conditions, reading the changes and recognising the air mass, management of time, how to leave for the first turnpoint and how to return home from the last turnpoint, etc, was all part of my daily briefings to Bob, both on the ground and during the flight. Outlanding was impossible due to rough terrain around the area. One day I extended a cross-country flight in the late evening, along a convergence line: it was a straight flight, the thermals had finished and we were 100km away from our destination. Approaching an airfield at 1000ft agl, located in between flat country and rough terrain, I moved upwind and downwind, east and west in between the runway and San Antonio airspace border, gaining altitude step-bystep. After gaining 1000ft we moved over the ‘tiger’ country into a good thermal, climbed to 5000ft and were able to return to home base. It was not a special technique, just basic cross-country flying know-how, but a great learning curve for

Day one in Texas

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Bob. Relaxing afterwards the flight data was displayed to friends so from then on every day my after-flight briefings grew.

AREA The Texas area comprises a gulf in the south and rough country to the north. Before leaving Australia I imagined a seabreeze coming in from the south then the air mass moving to the north, with the convection getting stronger and drier. I stayed three weeks in the are, there was a south wind every day and all runways run north-south. Uvalde, site of the 2012 FAI World Gliding Championships, is to the west and San Antonio International airport in the east. The flight trace shown was day one in Texas – a 146km out and return to the south – and Bob’s flight for me to understand the area. Boerne Stage airfield is just below San Antonio approach and is surrounded by impossible outlanding areas. Every day we climbed to 4000ft and contacted San Antonio air traffic approach control which read our positions by transponder. If we were at 4500ft they ordered international passenger flights to stay at 5000ft. If we were above 5000ft they ordered the aircraft to descend to below 4500ft. What great cooperation: gliding is wellknown in the States. I had doubts about always starting to the south because our average speed was too slow, so I asked the reason and was told: “It’s very simple, it’s because we always do.” I asked, “Why?” “It’s tradition,” was the reply. Starting to the south, towards flat country and a weak thermal area with a headwind, means 750km cannot be achieved. Over a few days I tried to collect more information and could get a detailed area map (by Google) along with National weather record data including temperature and humidity. I explained to Bob that the area site is in flat country to the south and rough January 2011

country to the north so the air mass temperature became higher and higher and drier to the north. Wind comes from the south forming north-south streeting and a convergence line forms from the south-west to north-east, because of the parallel line of gulf coastline. During one flight I explained how to try to understand the surrounding air mass, so after that Bob could find a better way to fly, have better cross-country flights and his average speed rose by 20%. I also explained that cumulus starting from the south every day does not mean thermals start from the south. It means the southern humidity is higher than the northern, so our start must be from the north, not the south. This was a huge culture change for those area pilots. The last week of my visit I enjoyed the Texas State Gliding Championships at Llano, 120km north of Boerne Stage; this was Bob’s first competition. Bob decided that we should take his glider and trailer to the site by road then fly from and to Boerne Stage, daily, in his power plane because his two dogs needed looking after at his home. I accepted this, but suggested we fly his glider to Llano prior to the competition as we wouldn’t need a trailer due to the fact that if we out-

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landed we would make sure it was on an airfield and get an aerotow retrieve. Bob agreed and we flew to Llano by glider, giving a good chance to demonstrate to Bob how to fly north over rough country and at the same time understand the contest area. Our average speed on this flight was 100km/h so Bob was happy. The Llano contest director commented that he had never met a competitor who came to a competition without a trailer: “Australians are always optimistic!”

THE BEST LA I D PLANS … We had planned to fly from Boerne Stage to Llano every day, but low cloud covered the home base every morning resulting in unflyable conditions. So on day one we had to leave at 6am by vehicle for the two-hour drive to the competition site. After finishing the day, the conditions were flyable, but we had no aircraft so we had to drive back two hours. This routine continued to the very last day. Every night we arrived home at 8pm, walked the dogs, jogged for an hour and dined at one of the many restaurants, returning home round 11pm. This made for a long day, but the dogs were very happy! The day after the competition finished I had to return to Australia, so

Shinzo with Bob and his crew friend at the Texas State Gliding Championships Photo: Courtesy Shinzo Takizawa

had to pack up. The plan was that after landing on the final day, Bob was to fly back to Boerne Stage by aerotow and I was to drive back. His flight was to take one hour; my trip would be two hours, meaning Bob must wait on the runway before he could move to a hangar as I had the airfield vehicle. So I drove at high speed on the highway and was subsequently caught for speeding. The police officer was a pretty, fully-armed female who asked me why I was in such a hurry. I explained the situation and finished by saying, “But, I am guilty, I am very sorry.” She checked all my papers and ended up just giving me a warning, so no fine. I don’t know why, but maybe it was my honesty or that my Australian driving licence is special. And so ended three very special weeks in Texas.

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Dehydration and Flying Dr Ken Wishaw MBBS FANZCA

For the majority of Australian pilots, be they commercial or recreational, a lot of time is spent in hot conditions. Dehydration is an often forgotten factor in flight safety and performance.

Dr Ken Wishaw at Burketown

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s a medical specialist (anaesthetist), fluid physiology and fluid management is a central part of my practice every day, and as a flying instructor I meet a lot of pilots who simply do not appreciate the hazards of dehydration or how to assess and manage their fluids. In temperate conditions a person normally loses about half to one litre per day through sweating. In hot conditions this can rise to as much as eight litres per day. Additionally we lose water at high altitude from breathing air that has a low water content. Add to this the concentration required to fly aircraft and meet schedules, diverts our attention from thinking about thirst and hydration, and the scene is set for trouble. A deficit of over one litre (two percent) due to failure to replace sweat losses can result in headaches, muscle cramps, dizziness and visual disturbances. But it is more than just taking enough water. In fact, just taking water may actually be harmful. A few facts needed to be understood as to why this is so. Our blood and body fluids normally contain 135 to 150 millimoles (mmols) of sodium and 100mmols of chloride per litre. What we lose in sweat depends partly on our genetic make-up, but more importantly on whether we are acclimatised. The more acclimatised we are, the less sodium and the more potassium we 6 Soaring Australia

lose in our sweat. Sodium losses for a person that is well acclimatised is of the order of 5 to 30mmols per litre. For someone who is not acclimatised (say an office worker who flies one or two days a week) sodium losses in sweat may be of the order of 40 to 100mmols per litre. (As a crude way of gaining an appreciation of these figures, try tasting the following solution: one level teaspoon of table salt, which is just sodium chloride, dissolved in a litre of water equals approximately 100mmols per litre.) We do possess a very sophisticated sodium control system in our bodies. But it only works well if we are sufficiently hydrated to produce reasonable amounts of urine, and ingesting enough sodium and potassium which the kidneys can chose to retain or discard. Most of us readily excrete excess sodium and potassium in our urine. Conversely, we also have a specific salt appetite. Pilots with low sodium levels often love salty foods at the end of the day! Ingestion of water to replace sweat losses will decrease the sodium concentration in our blood, as we are not replacing the sodium that we are losing. Severe acute decreases in blood sodium (say 10%) may cause headaches, lethargy, apathy and confusion. Severe acute decreases (over 15%) may cause convulsions (fitting). While this is extremely unlikely to occur in our situation, cases of convulsions occurring in top athletes who only use water replacement are documented. Suffice to say even the mild symptoms are highly undesirable for a pilot! Potassium losses may cause low blood pressure and weakness. Small amounts of sodium and potassium in rehydration fluids increases the rate at which the gut can absorb the fluid. Drinking only water, apart from leaving you still dehydrated (because you haven’t absorbed the fluid) can make you feel bloated and nauseous.

Pure water ingestion tends to shut off the thirst reflex, even when we are dehydrated. Taste is a critical factor on whether athletes drink adequately during exercise. Some people love pure water, others loathe it. High carbohydrate drinks such as energy drinks, fizzy drinks and fruit juice contain 10% to 30% carbohydrate. Levels of carbohydrate over eight percent inhibit intestinal absorption of the fluid. None of these are appropriate for rehydration during flight. Athletic performance is severely degraded by dehydration, and a lot of research has been done into dehydration management. From this the sports drinks have evolved. They are not just commercial fads, but scientifically validated drinks that will optimise rehydration, and minimise electrolyte disturbance. Sports drinks are not excessively high in sodium. At recommended strengths they contain 10 to 25mmol/litre. They are also designed to replace potassium losses. They do contain carbohydrate, but this is of the order of six percent which will not impede absorption or cause large fluctuations in blood sugar levels.

R e c o m m e n d at i o n s Guiding principles (on the basis that you are essentially fit and healthy) should therefore be • Do not take off already dehydrated. Remember ground preparation is sweaty stuff. • On short flights in temperate conditions whether we drink water or an electrolyte replacement is not critical. • On longer flights (say over two hours) we should be aiming to replace what we are losing. Sports drinks are appropriate for this. The subtle differences between the brands and flavours is not as critical as what tastes good to you.

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The carbohydrate (sugar) content is not harmful. Carbohydrate ingestion could only lead to a problem if a large carbohydrate load is taken at widely separated intervals, with the risk of insulin over secretion and low sugar levels occurring some hours later. Daily continuous sipping of sports drinks may theoretically lead to damage of tooth enamel. If you don’t want so much glucose, then mix the sports drink powder in a glass first then decant into your drink container. As the electrolytes dissolve faster than the sugar, you can leave most of the sugar behind. • Do not dilute the sports drink from the recommended formula. • Never take salt tablets, but if you have a desire for something salty, your body is telling you something and salty food may be just what you need. • Food will help contribute to electrolyte intake. • If you are on medication for high blood pressure you should discuss this with your doctor, however, you are unlikely to have problems provided that your electrolyte intake is not excessive. • Sports drink containers should be thoroughly cleaned every day. • Heavy coffee and tea drinkers are prone to severe headaches on acute withdrawal. Recent studies have shown that caffeine is not deleterious to sport performance and a small amount on the long flying day before or after the flight is okay. For the technically-minded or for those undertaking long flying you should meet these three criteria at the end of the flight: • Body weight loss should be less than two percent. • Urine colour should be pale (drugs and B vitamins can alter this). • Urine volume should have exceeded 0.5 (ideally 1.0) mls/kg per hour. If you fly a small aircraft, you must have a plan to handle the increased urine output. Deferring rehydration till after the flight is not an option! By way of example I undertook two seven hour mutual flights on successive days in a Super Dimona motor glider. Both days were very hot and dry, and the tasks were identical. On the first day I stuck to a water regime. By the end of the day I was nauseous, bloated had a severe headache, and mild dizziness. I opted to let the other pilot (and aircraft owner!) do the landing. My urine output was very poor, January 2011

but I had gained weight during the flight, meaning a lot of water was just sitting in my gut. The following day was identical except that I used a sport drink. At the end of the day I had none of the effects of the previous day and a far healthier urine output. We flew (and landed safely under my control). Rehydration with the correct fluids will improve your flying performance add to your enjoyment and make you a safer pilot. For further reading on this subject there are excellent fact sheets at [www. sportsdietitions.com.au]. has been a member of the RAAF medical reserve. Ken is an instructor at the Caboolture Gliding Club and the Pacific Soaring Motorglider Club at Caboolture.

About the author Ken Wishaw is an anaesthetist on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland. He was Australia’s first full-time rescue helicopter doctor, and co-founder of the CareFlight Rescue Helicopter Service in Sydney. He

GFA News

The article Dehydration and Flying also appeared in the May/June 2010 edition of Flight Safety magazine.

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WANTED – International Team Captains Applications are invited from anyone interested in filling the positions of team captain on our international teams for the next round of World championships. These are the Junior World Gliding Championships to be held in August 2011 at Musbach, Germany, the 32nd World Gliding Championships (flapped) to be held at Uvalde, Texas, USA in August 2012, and the 32nd World Gliding Championships (un-flapped) to be held at Aldolfo Gonzalez Chaves, Argentina in December 2012. Information on the duties and responsibilities of the position can be found in the Team Captain Handbook which may be downloaded from the Sport/Competition page on the GFA website. Questions and resumes may be directed to Mike Maddocks (ITC) at

<mike@maddogcomposites.com.au>. The selections will be finalised at or before the February sports’ committee meeting. Mike Maddocks

F A I N ews FAI Gliding Badge Report to 30 November 2010 A Badge

Caric, Davor

11641 Southern Riverina GC

A, B & C Badge

MacKenzie, Robert J Kislov, Dmitry Anstey, Bradley David Stuart, David Charles

11648 GCV 11649 Canberra GC 11650 Darling Downs SC 11651 Hunter Valey GC

Diamond Goal Badge

Graells, Jacques

Lake Keepit GC

Diamond Distance Badge

Oxer, Harry Frank

Beverley SC

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France on 25 euros a day

down with all my gear strapped on somewhere to start hitching back to Annecy. This trip proved my concept of surviving cheaply in France, eating from supermarkets (bread, cheese, fruit bought each day), and bistros are good value (an assiette anglaise or omelette and salad can be a big meal and only about €10). At the end of my stay I caught a fast TGV train back via Paris to Calais and got off miles from Calais due to a misunderstanding when buying my ticket (maybe my French isn’t that good). Seems the booking clerk thought I wanted to take the (very expensive) Eurostar train back to the UK, but the station for this is at least 30km from Calais port where I really wanted to cross to Dover at the foot passenger ferry rate of about €10. In fact, the station is so far from Calais that you can’t even see the ocean, it’s just a huge carpark in the middle of the countryside. Fraternité to the rescue – I had walked about 100m with my thumb out when someone stopped and went out of his way to drop me at the port, a long drive away on the other side of Calais. Merci bien!

John Chapman In 2004 I had my first trip to France to fly my paraglider at Annecy. Back then I went via the UK to buy a car and spent three months (June to August) flying around the Haute Savoie, staying in a small campsite. This was my long service and termination leave from the APF, so I had no need to rush back. I had spent two years working on my French at night school and listening to SBS, so I had a good time getting

Annecy town and Annecy lake

Return to France Last winter I did it again. I had a couple of items of unfinished business – first to fly over a glacier and second to get up on the high Chartreuse behind St Hilaire. The first meant that my initial hitch from Geneva was towards Chamonix, with Mt Blanc and the Mer de Glace. I had googled a campsite, so within six hours of landing from Oz, I had walked out of Switzerland and hitched

Home for three months in France

in with locals and learned that Dent de Crolles, St Hilaire, Chartreuse

hitching in France works really well.

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lucked onto the campsite at the south end of Lake Annecy, at Verthier near Doussard, the best-priced in the area at €5 a night and which had pilots, older people who went regularly and no pool or kids. It was great! (Google ‘Camping Simon de Verthier’ for more info.) For this trip the most expensive item was the car and insurance, but I carried cooking gear which offset the costs a bit. I also got to

fly at other sites such as the Puy de Dome near Clermont-Ferrand and the Normandy coast on the way back to the UK to resell the car. Two years ago I went back again for six weeks, but wanted to keep the costs down as I’m now fiscally challenged due to not wanting to work much (and getting out of the habit by hanging around Bright all summer in a tent).

Photos: John Chapman

Consequently I decided to leave the car out of the equation and just hitch – and even with the full paraglider pack, I got from Geneva to Annecy in a few hours with no hassles. Not having the car meant I was limited in my camping gear, but with a oneand-a-half kilo tent, sleeping bag and mattress and a full paraglider under my 25kg aircraft allowance I even had room for a couple of T-shirts. On this trip I also visited St Hilaire-du-Touvet and Laragne/Chabres further south. The St Hilaire campsite was especially economic since no-one seemed to be looking after it, it was free and had toilets and a hot water tap. It was early in the season, May/June, and the flying was regular, but a bit rain affected, so I never got far above the St Hilaire plateau and couldn’t get on to the Chartreuse mountains behind. St Hillaire is great for a pedestrian pilot on his own, with a special rate on the funicular for pilots to get back up if you bomb, but for most flights I was able to top land on the plateau near camp and at the end of my stay at St Hilaire I flew

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Chartreuse, looking north

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January 2011

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Chamonix valley and the Plan d’Aigulle launch

Annecy lake

web [www.chamonix.net/files/Parapente/ VolLibrepmb2008_en.pdf], so I had some idea of the local dos and don’ts, but everyone seemed pretty relaxed about the area. Plan d’Aiguille is the mid-station and PG launch site and needs afternoon sun – so no rush. In June the launch was just near the snow line, so good heating from the bare rocks below and in light thermals it wasn’t hard to get up. In fact, I was over my first glacier in a few minutes (Glacier des Bossons) and with a 3000m base it was easy to take a three-hour trip along the valley and back, overflying the Mer de Glace and returning from the Glacier Argentière about 15km behind launch. Three glaciers in one flight! If you fly here, be sure to check out the official landing site, it’s a small paddock in the middle of Chamonix, but the HG landing field is nearby and bigger.

One goal down

Over Chamonix, Mt Blanc

to Chamonix with my last lift dropping me at the campsite gates. A day’s sleep got me over the jet lag and I was soon hanging around the Aiguille cable car station trying to hook up with anybody carrying a PG bag. I met an English pilot who was taking a tandem up to the midstation at Plan d’Aiguille (south-east, Mt Blanc) side of the valley. I had already downloaded and read the extensive flying guide that the local clubs have on the 10 Soaring Australia

The next couple of weeks were wet and I did some walking up hills around Annecy with a nice Dutch lady, and not much flying, but I did buy a bike from the Bazar Sans Frontières and had a lot of fun playing in the traffic on the wrong side of the road. As the weather cycle came good again I moved down to St Hilaire-du-Touvet (there are several ‘St Hilaires’ in France). A bus to Albertville and a hot day’s hitching through the valleys and my last lift was up the hill and I even got an offer of a lift from the supermarket to the campsite, gotta love French hitching. What a difference a couple of years make! The camping municipal now had an onsite manager, new cabins for rent, new toilet blocks and a new tariff,

although still not expensive by French summer holiday standards [www. camping-saint-hilaire.com/]. From here its a steady walk down to launch and once the cliffs warm up, a pretty easy place to fly. I did one 20km trip south to Grenoble and back and on another day worked out the route pilots take to get on to the high country behind, the Dent de Crolles. This involves some ridge soaring, changing to thermalling, a crossing and more soaring to work the steps. There is nothing like slowly ridge soaring up 2000ft of vertical cliff to hold your attention and letting go of the toggles to take pics before you climb above the cliff doesn’t feel like an option. Anyway, this finally got me my cross-country trip around the high Chartreuse region – second goal down. I stayed at St Hilaire for another week, there is a Via Ferrata for climbing on the cliffs and some good walks for non-flying days, but eventually I loaded up one morning and flew down to start hitching back. I must have been especially lucky that day because my second lift with an Algerian family, complete with four kids and the wife in a burkah, got me all the way to Annecy before midday. Here I met up with a couple of other Bright pilots and spent the next six weeks variously flying on the good days or cycling around the countryside. We saw the Tour de France go past in Albertville on the only day that Cadel was in yellow and I had several notable flights. One of these got me past Le Gran Bornand and back nearly to Doussard via the Aravis range. On another day I tried for a one way trip to Chamonix, but made a mistake at about 40km and finished up having to hitch from Megève to Faverge, where I caught the last bus home. Flying Annecy is like flying a grownup Bright, lots of big ridges within glide in all directions, good roads to get back and lots of pilots too, so you can always

Mer de Glace, Chamonix

see what the air is doing. After three visits I haven’t had a problem with the dreaded valley winds of the Alps. To get the picture look at [www.panoramas.dk/2009/lakeannecy-paragliding.html] for a great visual of the area. Leaving Annecy, I took a train trip to Paris and spent a day along the Seine, sightseeing while carrying my whole kit due to a lack of left luggage facilities. One highlight of my day was walking past Paris Hilton at the Louvre, then it was another train trip to western France to meet with my sister. Trains in France are quite cheap compared to the UK and Oz and I found I got discounts for being over 60 and for early booking (so for less than a $100 I crossed half of France). After 10 weeks, this was the end of my hitching holiday – my sister and her friend had a car and it was with a sigh of relief that I dumped the paraglider into the boot and toured Normandy in comfort (I even got to fly a bit on the coastal cliffs), then a ferry to Jersey (where I finally claimed a flight on UK territory) and then back to the UK for family stuff. En-route I saw Leonardo da Vinci’s grave, had a Segway tour around Amboise (a highlight of the trip) and got to wear a suit at a wedding. So, if you want a simple trip through Flying on UK territory, Jersey, Channel islands winter, some easy flying in big mountains and a great experience, just drop yourself in the middle of Europe for the summer. You don’t need much and apart from the airfare it can be as cheap as living in Oz if you are prepared to do a bit of walking and learn some language basics. You do need some self-confidence as a pilot, because the French will just watch you as you move onto launch, no pack drill, no paperwork, just inflate and fly. But it is fun, and that’s what it’s all about.

Over the Aravis range, Mt Blanc in the distance

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Coaching Under The Microscope! Bernard Eckey Every now and then one is in for something unexpected. Back in May last year the GFA invited me to attend the fourth Annual Coach Education Conference in Brisbane. Because I only had to dedicate two weekdays to the task I feel obliged to provide feedback to all GFA members.

Jenny Thompson flying the ASW27B

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his two-day-long conference was all about: • Performance enhancement in team sports, • Coaching of elite athletes, and • Sports management issues. Household names such as Kieren Perkins and Steve Moneghetti, as well as top coaches in sports like soccer, rugby, swimming, rowing and NBL, were on the list of speakers. In addition, past and present elite athletes provided feedback on their experience with coaches in a variety of sports. In total, some 200 coaches from Australia and New Zealand attended. The organisers also invited local and overseas sports scientists to present insights into different topics, ranging from recruitment to team selection, and

Photo: Al Sim

the Australian Institute of Sport provided input as well. You might surmise that the conference proved to be of little value for gliding and I must admit this was my first impression as well. However, as the conference progressed it became quite apparent that a lot of useful information could be obtained by reading between the lines and by drawing comparisons to gliding activities. It helped that the organisers had arranged concurrent sessions which allowed attendees to select the most appropriate topic for their specific coaching activity. Let me first focus on the conclusions in respect to management issues. A key message that came through loud and clear is that improvement in performance

and member satisfaction go hand in hand. In any sport, fun and enjoyment is the driving force, but enjoyment can only be expected when participants experience tangible progress. Only then will members remain true to their chosen activity and become strong supporters of their club or organisation. But the individual’s progress is not the responsibility of the coach alone. More than anything else it requires the right club culture and a progressive strategy driven by a strong leadership team. A single improvement hardly ever leads to success, but rather a combination of necessary changes that create and sustain an attractive environment. The message is simple – without a supportive and performance-orientated club culture, even good coaching will rarely result in

noticeable progress for the majority of members and the benefits for the club as a whole are minimal. An equally relevant message was driven home by Kieren Perkins in his keynote address during the conference dinner. In fact, his speech proved to be one of the highlights for me, due to its direct relevance to our current situation. Kieren looked back at his early swimming career and on the frustrations that resulted from the different approaches taken by different coaches in different regions. As a result, progress was slow and frustration reigned supreme amongst some of the athletes. But the appointment of a National swimming coach and the resulting streamlining of coaching processes throughout the country changed this. The results are now there for everyone to see. At its pinnacle, the Australian swimming team collected 10 of a possible 35 gold medals at the 2000 Olympics in Sydney. No other swim team since has recorded a higher collection of gold medals and this success has transferred into the grassroots level with a healthy membership inflow. Perhaps there is a lesson in that for us. With this short excursion into overlaying management topics, back to everyday coaching issues. A very interesting lecture discussed low budget coaching – most certainly a topic highly relevant to our current situation. The speaker pointed to a number of examples where ultra-modern and top-class training facilities failed to result in improved athlete performance. Exactly the same seems to hold true for first class training aids which has led to the conclu sion that it is wise to use technology as an accelerator – not as a centrepiece. What really matters is the mindset of the individual and a determination to turn potential into reality. Talent alone is clearly not enough but ability, attitude, preparation and undivided commitment is what usually results in outstanding performances. In other words, success is a choice that individuals can make as long as athlete and coach are prepared to put in the necessary hard work. The sad fact is that almost everyone knows the secrets of success, but only few actually live it. If you don’t believe me, ask Steve Moneghetti and consider his 200 000km of running training throughout his outstanding career as a marathon runner. The role of the coach varies greatly – not only from sport to sport, but also depending on the performance level of the individuals involved. A close per-

sonal relationship is essential in situations where the athlete trains twice a day under the guidance of his or her coach and this training occurs on at least six days per week. Here we are clearly considering coaching at an elite level – something that is hardly subject of this article. Of course, the situation is fundamentally different in our sport. Coaching happens at best once every few weeks and theoretical knowledge is now recognised as a key driver of performance. Therefore most coaching in gliding is aimed at pre-solo and early post-solo pilots and the emphasis is on hands-on coaching with a number of flights in a two-seater. Ideally this is then progressed by some lead and follow cross-country coaching. At this more basic level, sports psychology plays an extremely important role. Any feedback needs to be positive and encouraging and it is necessary for the coach to follow up on suggestions and monitor further self directed training. At a much higher level, the coach is primarily required to act as a consultant

Spectacular lenticular

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and identify areas for improvement. As a second step he (or she) needs to suggest methods for overcoming such weaknesses. As stick and rudder skills are usually reasonably well polished at this level of performance coaching will most likely focus on mental issues, including tactical or strategic matters. In a relationship governed by mutual trust and respect, the coach’s feedback can and should be more direct. In the words of a wellknown top athlete at the conference, you must be able to ‘cop it on the chin and get on with it’. The truth may hurt on occasions, but true champions appreciate honest feedback and are prepared to accept advice. Not only are they able to handle change, but they usually embrace it in order to climb the ladder of success. But even with a firm desire for progression and all other essential attributes, we can not expect improvement to happen overnight. Persistence is what matters most and that applies equally to coaches and pilots!

Photo: Bill Verco

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Thinking About Australia’s Sailplane Fleet – Part 2

relatively constrained service life, however, may well last the total of the target market’s intended period of involvement in those sports. As the traditional sport of gliding has shrunk in participation, there are proportionally also loss of corporate knowledge and limited remnant numbers of suitably qualified senior people (irrespective whether these are paid or volunteer) to form the underpinning resource to permit the sport segment to continue to operate. There already are a number of sites which each rely for such minimum resource base on the occasional attendance of some key individuals whose loyalties were given to their home club and are subsequently shared with other operators. Not a good basis from which to evolve the new sport.

Emilis Prelgauskas Overview This note extends the build up in the series about where the sport of gliding is at today, drawing on lessons from the succession of previous eras which the sport has travelled through. These are presented here to stimulate conversation, just as has occurred while these notes have been coming into being.

Elsewhere in society Useful insights can also be drawn from other activities in society. Thus the discussion amongst professionals in both the design and construction industries is the prognosis that the industry trend there is for only the very small operators and those trending toward the very large to have a future. Only these segments have the necessary natural advantages for a recognisable purpose into that coming future: the very large, who can grow to compete for all classes of work with in-house and allied expertise, capabilities and resourcing, and the very small, who have built reputations for excellence within their own area of speciality. Therefore it is the mediumsized operators without either of these positioning advantages who will progressively disappear. The thinking about Australia’s sailplane fleet has (in Part 1) identified some groupings.

Prognosis a) That the well-established clubs and pilots can continue to update and set their outcomes pitched to the modern consumer market. Where societal guiding attitudes have over time trended away from earlier eras of self help and mutual help, and moved on to the current emphasis on drivers for personal outcomes. b) Where at the same time small segments of the sport founded on principles of self-determination can continue to successfully meet their own operating targets; some of which may target older paradigms.

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In contrast, the average club and its fleet, as it ages, represents a declining resource base, and with this less buying power to succeed in travelling on either of these paths.

For the well-established For those advocating a preference for a new soaring sport aimed at the current day users’ audience, it needs to be understood that this comes complete with the usual list of collateral obligations. An analogy about this can be drawn once again from elsewhere in society – this time: the vehicle company initially established on principles of entry level cars and affordability, which five decades later has become a conglomerate spanning many iconic manufacturer names, none of which today provide entry level models. In gliding’s equivalent it is not enough for just the fleet to be modern. The ground support, service provision and responsibilities need to complement this standard. And there is considerable underpinning resourcing needed, which previously was provided by volunteers, and which in a modern sport needs to be paid support. Essential base resources, both in tangible and process terms, include: • convenient access and good standard of ground facilities, • modern and available fleet irrespective of peak demand and servicing requirements, • individualised service with ease of access, rapid progression and breadth of options as hallmarks, • responsibility centred back on the service providers with in-built indemnity for users. From this list, the sole item of flexibility then left for these providers is price. That will be a massive shift away from the traditions of a break-even sport subsisting on volunteer contributions of time and skills; and toward the fully-costed operation complete with externalities (OH&S cover, long service leave, disburse-

For those of independent mind

Emilis Prelgauskas

ments) as well as discretionary surpluses and profit. The history of past entrants in this segment (commercial operations) which have come and gone over the decades are a reminder about how hard this positioning is. Individual operators have come and gone over the years. Longevity in this segment not only relies on a willing market, but also on the operator’s asset depth to survive off-season, market fluctuation, and other external inputs which are unforeseeable, uncontrollable, yet fundamentally affect operations viability. The willingness of the market too can be transitory. Attraction incentives that work may only bring business for a defined short time: fly the new sailplane, only available here; the aerobatics course, the famous site leader, the site’s special attributes, new pilot ratings, and so on. In more recent times, the sport’s own national structures and processes themselves have already repositioned the federation toward this direction. Then later, only to realise the degree to which there is then an increased essential base dependence only on paid resources. Flexible wings aviation sports have traditionally been more customer-focused. Flex wing airframe is of modest capital cost compared with fixed wings. Their

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The sport does not encompass uniform humanity. True, for many the preference is for prescriptively structured hardware and processes, with obligation and responsibility outsourced to providers. In the modern world, the background implication on the more free-minded individual participant, is that if you don’t conform to those rigid structures, incalculable hardships will befall you. This is a confusion in the sport of gliding. The sport encompasses some risk. Risk avoidance is about appropriate response; going intelligently, responding to the circumstance, not expecting rote answers, processes or fixed top down structures to cover every eventuality. Thus individual clubs will fill in the SMS Risk Assessment stuff quite differently. And the individual pilot could be expected to view the questions posed uniquely once again. Some pilots therefore expect the sport to involve their personal participatory involvement; to be responsible for their own actions and for the ‘independent operator’ definition to mean precisely that; and where the airframe placard already says ‘persons flying in this aircraft do so at their own risk, CASA does not set safety standards for experimental aircraft’, these pilots expect to make their own assessment. The challenge for a sport transitioning to a new modern form is to clearly spell out which part of Australia’s sailplane fleet is operating within the communal setting,

January 2011

and the segment where individual airframes are entirely operator-responsibility. The motto for the independent operator segment may well be: “You do this because you choose to.” The processes in this segment are fundamentally incompatible with a rigid hierarchical edict-based communal setting aimed at codifying indemnity.

S p ort s e g m e n t

airframes together with interested custodians as a strategy for longevity in those airframes.

The centre 60% This collective experience above may inform the follow-on generation of airframes. For the 20 to 40-year-old airframes the potential arises for a ‘classic’ segment to form as the modern sport dispenses with these and for them to also move to individual custodianship; be this either in the independent operator world or by the forming of a particular collective of interest in these either FRP or metal airframes.

Quite distinct from the individualism segment, some decades ago a loose definition began, and has come to now encapsulate, the vintage collective part of soaring. Airframes of wood construction: stick and rag. Some four decades ago, European Emilis Prelgauskas in his working life instinct was to declare such airframes to is an architect, focusing on emerging have a 10 year useful life set by official technologies. Thus he works in the foredict, based on some experience with ward vision segment of a job that is airframe structures of powered aircraft about envisioning the yet-to-be-made. continuously left outdoors and some lab He has over the decades often written assessments of some glue types. in gliding media on emerging issues. Australia, at the time, had the grit, vision and capability, to forego the hysteria, and choose to permit continued operation of these types based on individual infield maintenance and inspection. Today the benefit is that this fatigueresistant construction has numbers of glider types and airframe Wind, rain, numbers operational temperature, in the field and humidity, appealing to its particular segment. barometer, That segment fits plus more… those interested in the sport’s past, airframe types with appeal, and the evolution of techniques they capture. The vintage segment has made Australian Agent some strides for this for Davis Instruments. to be identifiable, with the provision of skills from within Ask for your its own ranks, withFREE catalogue. Unit 5, 17 Southfork Drive out therefore placKilsyth VIC 3137 ing a load on the Phone: (03) 9761 7040 Fax: (03) 9761 7050 wider sport. email: <davis@ecowatch.com.au> And further with the tying individual web: [www.davisinstruments.com.au]

Weather Station

ECOWATCH

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THE XX FILES Desirée Pansi, proudly sponsored by [www.hippo.co.za]

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started flying in 1995, my first competition was around 1999 – Barberton, but this was more of a big fly-away for me and I loved the social aspects. When we moved to Austria in 2001, I also attended a few comps, but never took them seriously. Every December we would return to South Africa on holiday and attend the Porterville event, but mainly to visit our pilot friends. It wasn’t until 2007 that the competition bug bit me a little. In 2009 I made the South African team and attended the 11th FAI World Cup in Mexico, there I discovered the addictive side of competitions. By this time I had met most of the top lady pilots from around the world. As Desirée Pansi, South Africa women we naturally talked, and I discovered I was not alone in thinking that female pilots are different in the way they approach the sport. In Mexico the talk of splitting the ladies from the Worlds had started. FAI were considering removing the plus one spot, which is allocated for women, and make it open to each country to decide if their spot goes to a female or not. We had a meeting amongst the ladies present to discuss this issue and most were not happy, but we did discover that all of us would like to attend a women’s only event – mainly to see how we would do without the influence or flying decisions from men. Since then, I qualified for the PWC circuit and attended my first event in Turkey. I used this time to interview and discuss flying related issues with a few other ladies and I discovered some interesting points. First up was Elisa Houdry from France, 11th FAI World Lady Champion. She has been flying since 1995. Her parents were both paragliding pilots and she was always with them on the mountain. After she had her first tandem and enjoyed it a lot, she decided to also start flying. Flying has been a dream from Elisa Houdry, France a very young age. 16 Soaring Australia

She attended her first competition in 2001, when a friend invited her to go along. It was a good way to get to know other sites. She enjoys competitions because she gets to fly with other pilots from different countries, in different countries. She says, “I enjoy tactical tasks were you use your brain more than your legs”– she finds having to fly with constant speedbar strenuous on her legs; most woman aren’t as strong as men when it comes to long hours of pushing bar. She believes a lot of women do not fly comps as it takes up a lot of leave, which most women would rather use as time spent with their kids and families. Females generally don’t push as hard as the men either. She advises other female pilots to attend events, but do so to have fun and to be with other pilots, to forget about the results. Next up was Keiko Hiraki from Japan. I struggled a little with the language barrier, but Keiko was very patient. She started flying Keiko Hiraki, Japan 13 years ago. In 2004 the company she was at closed down and she decided she wanted to travel, getting a sponsor and attending competitions made this possible. She enjoys competition flying, because it gives her freedom, but she hates having to use technical equipment or sitting in a hotel due to bad weather. She believes that less women compete because they believe it to be dangerous and don’t like to take the risks. She thinks the best way around this is to just fly, not to hide from your fears, follow your mind. When I asked her: “Do you think men and women are equally matched in this sport and why?” She answered, “No and if I knew what was different I could fix it and win overall!” The next lady up is a good friend and always fun to be with, interviewing her was no different: Marina Olexina from Russia. She watched pilots from the sideline since 1996, but could only start flying in 2000. In 2002 she attended her

Des Pansi in competition gear at the Gradient De Aar XC Open Paragliding Competition 2010 Photo: Riaan Nieuwoudt

first comp, the Russian Champs and won the Ladies class. In 2006 she was first woman and second overall in a World cup in Switzerland. She enjoys the spirit and friendly atmosphere at comps. She is Marina Olexina, Russia not motivated by results, merely enjoys being with the other pilots, but she hates it when the weather doesn’t play along. She also believes women are more careful by nature and only brave women tend to compete. Many come to their first comp, but see the skill level, get scared and never return. Her advice to other female pilots is, come fly a competition and watch how the other pilots fly. Make an analysis of the other pilots. Follow them and try to understand why they make the decisions they make. Once you make goal following the others, start to try doing it by making your own decisions. You need to stick to a group all the time, you can’t do it alone. Also, don’t be shy to ask other pilots for advice; most top pilots don’t mind sharing their knowledge. January 2011

Marina believes some women are equal to men, but the top male pilots are braver and push harder because of this. Most of the top male pilots are professional pilots, it is their full-time profession to fly and compete. Most women have other jobs, have to work and cannot dedicate as much time to flying. Another factor is that many female pilots are smaller in stature and therefore fly smaller wings; this already disadvantages them as the bigger gliders also have better performance. I got some time before take off one day, to chat to Renata Kuhnova, from the Czech Republic. She started flying in 1997 when she wanted to parachute, but some friends convinced her to come with them to try paragliding instead. She had no idea what it entailed until she arrived for the course. Her first competition was in 2001, when a program for young talent was developed in her country and she received sponsorship to attend a competition. She has many good flying memories, but treasures the day she beat Petra (a fellow Czech and one of the best ever female pilots) by only one point. She enjoys competitions because she gets to travel, to meet new people from

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different cultures and to fly new sites in varied conditions. Renata believes most women don’t compete because they have very little free time and most of it gets spent with family and children. When a woman becomes financially independent enough to allow her to compete, she tends to be older than the average competing man, has more natural fear and is less likely to take the required risks. She advises pilots to start competitions early and with other novice pilots. If you can get a group of friends of the same level together you can help and support each other along the way. You need to learn to co-operate with other pilots. Renata believes women are gentler and lighter than their male counterparts, so they don’t fight as hard or can’t push as hard. “We don’t have as much testosterone.” We have to live to bear children and this thought is always in the back of our minds, stopping us from pushing harder. While in Mexico I first met this next lady, since then we have become friends and colleagues on the Women’s Paragliding Open Committee, Anja Kroll, from Switzerland. She started flying in 2001 and competing two years later in order to improve her flying skills and to learn

from others. After she moved from Berlin to Switzerland with its beautiful mountains, and it wasn’t long before she discovered paragliding and had Renata Kuhnova, to try it. Czech Republic She enjoys competitions as it enables her to fly in different places with arranged and organ ised infrastructures, like transport to take-off, retrieve, briefings and medical services. Competitions allow her the opportunity to have good flights, which she would not have had on her own. She also appreciates the precious flying information she gathers from the other pilots in the field. Anja states that worldwide the fraction of female pilots is only around 10%, naturally this affects the number of females competing, making for less. She doesn’t give general advice to women starting to compete, as she believes everyone is different and should know what’s best for themselves. Anja believes many facts prove that men and women aren’t equally matched in this sport, supported by looking at the WPRS, the World records in the ‘overall’ category,

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Des Pansi Launching at the Gradient De Aar XC Open Paragliding Competition 2010 Photo: Riaan Nieuwoudt

the points achieved by male and female pilots in XContest and the overall task winners in competitions. If we were equally matched, around 10% of these positions would be Anja Kroll, Switzerland taken by women – yet they’re not. Some reason are obvious to her: Women are statistically lighter, take less risks, are weaker, lack technical skills and these are only a few examples. She explains in depth: • Lighter weight means smaller gliders with aerodynamic disadvantages – not much we can do about this. • Risktaking – a commonly known issue in psychology, women take less risks. Competition flying asks for taking risks – not always, but it does. This is one point, I’m glad about: As girls we might loose a task, but are more likely to retain our health and wellbeing. • Physical strength – the nature of our sport fortunately does not call for top

athletes, but on a long and turbulent glide the strength with which you operate the speedbar will make a difference. Here every pilot can work to improve her strength and stamina. • Technical skills – among the top crosscountry pilots in the world there are a lot of professional test pilots and pilots who have mastered aerobatic manoeuvres just for fun. That is an advantage when it comes to flying difficult passages and taking risks. The ability to catch your glider after an accelerated collapse might be vital. Can you name any top female crosscountry pilots who fly aerobatics? There is a lot of room for improvement. • Smaller numbers – in all fields competition is the key to better performance for the individual. Because we are only few, it is comparatively easy to do well in the female rankings. If it weren’t that easy, each of us would have to be more ambitious and to train harder. Here, again, I see a high potential for improvement. Lastly, also from Switzerland, a young lady I first met at the Czech Open in Italy three years ago. Regula Strasser started flying in 2001. When she was a child, she would visit her grandmother in the mountains and was fascinated to watch the paragliders. When she was old enough to fly, she didn’t need much convincing. Her first competition was in 2004, the Swiss Nationals. Other pilots motivated her to come have some fun and convinced her it was a good way to learn how to fly better. Competitions are also a good

H G FA way to travel and visit places that are off the general tourist routes, you get to meet ‘real’ people. Regula Strasser, Switzerland As others, she believes most women are afraid to compete. She is fortunate though that the Swiss League offers training to newer pilots, outside and away from competition stress. They offer mentor programs with top pilots to assist and train pilots before competing, so when they attend their first competition they have more knowledge and confidence. This program has helped her tremendously. I didn’t get a chance to talk with more ladies, but I think we can get some good insights from those above. I have thought a lot about what these ladies, others and a few men have had to say on the topic. I have come to believe that our biggest downfall as female pilots is that we continue to compete with each other and don’t aim higher. I believe the mental, physical and technical issues can be worked on and improved. We need to aim for the overall score more and stop focusing just on the female podium. If we want something bad enough, we will find a way to get it. So, perhaps the changes that FAI wish to bring about for the Worlds may be to our advantage, as this will force us to up our game in order to qualify to be with the best.

The 2010 South Australian Hang Gliding Championships Pete Bolton

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he competition was run (as usual) over a series of four spring weekends. This year, there was hill-launching only as all our past tow paddocks in the SA mid-north area were still under crop. SA’s hills are typically only about 500ft agl, so getting away from these hills in light winds can be quite ‘challenging’. We flew at total of six tasks from four different sites. Conditions were variable with winds from zero to 25kt and cloudbases reached over 11 000ft on at least one day. Goal distances were typically about 80km, with one turnpoint and a downwind component to both legs, due to the moderate to fresh winds we had to fly in. Paul Kelley had the longest goal flight of about four hours, due to an extra turnpoint he felt he had to handicap himself with! Winner, and leader through most of the comp, was mid-north local, Tony ‘Crossy’ Cross, on an Airborne Rev. Tony won by a large margin after some very consistent flying. This was all the more remarkable because he has just returned to HG after an absence of about three years! In second place was Paul Kelley (meethead and outgoing SA champion).

Encounter At Lake George

In third by a narrow margin was the ‘Flying Dutchman’, Miguel de Jong. I was in fourth place, and interesting was that second, third and fourth places all flew Airborne C4s. Winner of the Floater Class was Paul ‘Kamikaze’ Baxter, winning narrowly from Ben Levick. There were no major incidents or serious injuries and most of us didn’t get too much heat stress on SA’s bare hills. Many of our hill sites are now also the sites of wind farms. We have reached some agreements with the owners/operators for us to be able to continue to fly from the hills after construction. Fortunately, turbines are not able to be sited near radio/TV/phone towers, so there remain a few gaps in the rows of turbines. It is possible to fly in front of turbines, but we have agreed to certain minimum clearances for safety reasons. We’ve known for years that we really need a large car-tow site which is available to us all year round, but we haven’t been able to come up with the money to buy or lease one. This would probably cost about 100 times what the average pilot is prepared to pay. So, we continue jumping off small hills in light winds and hope for the best. Thanks to all who worked to make this comp a success and to all who made the effort to take part (too numerous to mention here). I hope to see some of you at Forbes.

Miguel de Jong high over the Lochiel ridge

Miguel flying at Hallett Hill Wind Farm with his frog mascot

Full results at [www.users.on.net/~dsg/ 2010StateComp/results.html]

Kathryn O’Riordan

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orj Lowrey and I drove down to Canberra Friday for a bit of a fly over Lake George. A strong south-easterly was blowing of about 18 to 20kt. Dave May was waiting to give us the full tour. Good view of the lake. The ridge runs 20km to the north and the same to the south. Fun flying, plently of lift and plently of room to goof around. Dave was flying all the way out to the waters’ edge

and back. Jorj and I stayed closer to the ridge. Cloudbase was quite low. I can imagine the great flying that could be done on a good day when you can go over the back and head cross-country toward Forbes… I had an altercation with a territorial eagle. Cheeky, considering how much larger my ‘bird’ is! It just went for my nose cone (they think the nose cone is the bird’s head). No scars on my sail, thank God!

Kathryn comes eye to eye with a local

18 Soaring Australia

January 2011

January 2011

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Narromine Cup Week 2010 Beryl Hartley The 2010 Australian gliding season was shaping up to be a wet and stormy one with early gliding championships washed out and the possibility of an early monsoon season. After so many years of drought it was a welcome relief to the country people of Australia, but not a good year for the gliding community.

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month out from the Narromine Cup organisers were busy checking all the long range forecasts which all showed a week of rain. The weather pundits and the online weather pessimists con-

tinued to predict doom, gloom and rain for the 13th Narromine Cup Week. To those who braved the prediction and for the organisers who continued to plan for a week of soaring, the Weather Gods blessed the week with some excellent soaring conditions. Thirtyseven pilots registered for a great week of flying from 21 November and the Narromine Gliding Club provided all the service they excel at, with easy launching and flight operations and evenings spent with sociable drinks and meals on the deck under a full moon. Sadly some of our Narromine Cup stalwarts were unable to attend this year. The face of cup week, Chris Stephens, ran the second briefing and then Greg Schmidt stepped up and filled in for Chris with an excellent performance. Paul Mander and David Wilson were able to take up the coaching tasks from Ross McLean and they presented informative seminars each morning with Paul taking new and old students each day in the ASH 25. The Narromine Cup was established to provide a safe, fun and comfortable environment for pilots from first crosscountry to international representative pilots and it lived up to its goals again

this year. Most pilots flew six days with at least 45 tasks more than 500km, 12 over 600km and two over 700km. The winner, Bryan Hayhow, demonstrated the goals of the Narromine Cup Week by flying six days and achieving his longest task possible each day. Richard Frawley was runner-up. The older and very experienced pilots Bob Ward, Paul Mander, Tony Tabart, David Wilson and regular visitor Richard Van Grunsven set the pace each day and on most days set the longest distance. This year, the last full week in November, will be the 14th anniversary of Narromine Cup Week so book now to ensure you are there for this fun week of gliding.

20 Soaring Australia

Bernie Baer and Phil Eldridge

The Narromine Cup As A Transition To Cross-Country And Competition Flying Bryan Hayhow

Met man David Wilson with Simon Brown Photo: Jo Pocklington

Regular attendee Ian McCallum

Mark Barnfield

Narromine Cup runner-up Richard Frawley with Schempp-Hirth’s new Australian agent and Cup winner Bryan Hayhow

Jim Kent and Derek Ruddock in the Southern Cross Gliding Club DG1000

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here has been a resurgence of the regatta concept among many of the more cross-country oriented clubs in Australian gliding of late. Some have a more formal competition element, others less so. All, however, share the same aim of giving less experienced pilots, the opportunity to experience XC/comp flying in a less pressured environment, while having access to coaches and mentors. The concept has had great success with a good roll up of pilots and a lot of great flying being achieved. The Narromine Cup has been around now for some 12 years and has become, probably, the most wellknown of these events. It continues to draw pilots from all over the eastern and southern states, and usually, some overseas visitors (this year from Spain, The Netherlands, Japan and the USA). It is always a chance to

Bathurst Soaring Club’s Sean Young with Soar Narromine tuggie Keith Dixon

catch up with old friends, as well as get in some good flying for the old hands, while affording newcomers the opportunity to take advantage of that wealth of experience. The cup has always been about providing the opportunity for pilots to be able to achieve their flying goals. There is a complete infrastructure on hand to facilitate that, along with full catering and scoring via the On Line Competition (OLC) (with its associated handicap factors). It really could not be made easier or more encouraging for the pilot. The focus is on distance flying and after the morning briefing and weather, pilots will usually split up and task according to their experience and aims.

Paul Mander and Ian Baldwin

Photos: Anne Elliott It’s not uncommon to meet pilots who are looking for their first 50km or 300km flights and, just down the grid, find others who are attempting 1000km. It is just that diversity that makes the cup

Photos: Anne Elliott

January 2011

January 2011

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South Australian State Gliding Championships 2010 John Hudson Bathurst Soaring Club tuggie Brian Bailey once again helped out during cup week

Tony Tabart, who popped in to Narromine for a day on his way to Lake Keepit, with Bob Ward

The South Australian State Gliding Championships were staged from Waikerie aero-

Above photos: Jo Pocklington

drome from the 17 to 21 November 2010. Seven pilots entered the competition, which Bill Paine in Narromine Gliding Club’s Duo Discus

one of the more interesting for all the pilots involved, the newcomers can fly with coaches and mentors and pair up with others who can assist them around a task. That encouragement and assistance has always resulted, year after year, in many pilots going home with substantial developments in their flying. I’ve always been a huge fan of the cup for that reason, and in previous years have been involved there in a coaching role at an introductory cross-country level. This year Paul Mander ran the morning

lecture series and, as always, gave great insight into the art of soaring. We were blessed with six challenging days of flying and a lot of kilometres covered. If you are looking to extend your flying, or just want an atmosphere of mutual encouragement, consider adding the Narromine Cup to your schedule. I know that taking part in five of the last six cups has been of tremendous value to me and I look forward to seeing you there at the next one.

Andy Smith is back in Australia to avoid the English winter Photos: Anne Elliott

Final Glide

– Neville Barker

Leslie Novak, Sydney Gliding Club

was conducted in a variety of weather conditions, ranging from difficult to ideal.

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ollowing a non-compulsory practice day on Tuesday 16th, the first competition day in reasonable conditions took the fleet from Waikerie to Notts Well, Peebinga, Lindsay River and return to Waikerie. Peter Temple from the Adelaide Soaring Club at Gawler won the day. Day two provided the most trying weather for gliding, with showers and wind forecast. A task from Waikerie to Wunkar, Overland Corner, Lock 2, Woolpunda and return to Waikerie was flown – with three outlandings not far from the airfield. The day was won by Terry Cubley from the Adelaide Soaring Club. Day three provided much better conditions, allowing a task from Waikerie to Meribah to Lake Culleraine and return to Waikerie. The day was won by Terry Cubley. Day four provided an even better weather day, enabling a much longer task to be set, although starting later. The weather prediction was for relatively light winds, slightly increased temperatures with cu on the Flinders Ranges and strong

Participating pilots Peter Temple and Terry Cubley, Adelaide Soaring Club; Craig Vinall, Grant Hudson, Peter Paine and Greg Jackson, Waikerie Gliding Club; and Matthew Scutter Adelaide Soaring Club

Grant Hudson of Waikerie Gliding Club preparing for take-off

lift to around 11 000ft. The set speed task, from Waikerie to Farrell Flat, Peterborough, Spalding and return to Waikerie resulted in an average speed of 114.3km/h for the 400km plus race, which was won by Terry Cubley again. Day five saw another great gliding weather day with again a slight rise in temperature and strong thermals with cu, resulted in a task set from Waikerie to Meribah, Wentworth and return. The weather was as predicted enabling good climbs under cu to around 11 000ft, again

with good times for day five, which was also won by Terry Cubley. With the daily winner allocated 1000 points and the competition winner the pilot with the most points at the end of the competition.

Photos: John Hudson

overall scores

1 2 3 4 6 7

Terry Cubley Peter Temple Craig Vinall Grant Hudson Peter Paine Greg Jackson

Adelaide SC Adelaide SC Waikerie GC Waikerie GC Waikerie GC Waikerie GC

4924 points 4620 points 4050 points 3887 points 2725 points 2682 points

Neville Barber passed away on 18 October 2010, aged 59 years.

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eville joined Concordia Gliding Club in 1983 and flew his first solo in our ASK 13 the same year. He threw himself into our club’s life right from the beginning and held various committee positions throughout. Neville’s legacy can still be seen in Camden, where he built our club’s hangar. He was a builder/project manager and in the 1990s founded his own company, Barker Constructions. Neville helped the club through his business, printing brochures and contributing any way he could.

22 Soaring Australia

On weekends he was seen on the field, often with his young sons, enjoying his gliding. In 1985 he won the club’s ‘Best Pilot’ trophy for his cross-country flying and was the first pilot in the club to fly a 750km triangle. Neville’s life was cut short by muscular dystrophy. I had the privilege to take him on what turned out to be his last glider flight in January last year. The Sydney Gliding Club would like to extend deepest sympathy to his wife Susan and sons Hugh and Joel. Rest in peace, mate.

Neville Barker

January 2011

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Interview:

me to get away for international trips these days!

Kraig Coomber

Who do you see as the top favorites for the next worlds title at Monte Cucco? There are several pilots that have the ability to win. It will come down to who makes the least mistakes. Jonny Durand certainly has a chance. The Moyes USA trailer loaded up in LA before heading to the Florida comps

the boats would cock toward the south (indicating flyable wind direction at Stanwell), it would be near unbearable for me to be there. Lets just say that school would sometimes end a little earlier than it should in these conditions!

You’re originally from Australia but living in the US now, how did that come about? 1996 Forbes Flatlands (l-r): Reba Moyes, Jack Cain (kids) Kraig Coomber, Drew Cooper

Congratulations you’ve just won the Santa Cruz Flats competition for the second year in a row; I heard it’s the only competition you’ve competed in the last two years. You must like flying there?

Photo: Richard Tabaka

Vicki Cain and Corinna Schwiegershausen

Yes, I like it a lot. It is similar to the flatlands in Australia so I’m quite comfortable there. I’ve always preferred the flats over mountains – there is something about being able to fly in any direction you want!

What motivated you to get into hang gliding?

his career at the Moyes factory in Australia, flying in

I always thought about flying when I was a kid and had a school teacher that flew hang gliders. He would tell us about his flying and it seemed like the coolest thing you could do. I remember calling a hang gliding school in North Queensland when I was about 12 asking them what I needed to do to fly. They told me I had to wait until I was 16. I started taking lessons at 15 and had my first solo shortly after my 16th birthday.

competitions from age 17. He now distributes for Moyes USA

When did you first start competing and what was your first big win?

Just about everyone in the US hang gliding scene will know of Kraig Coomber, a likeable Aussie and unassuming master of the art of hang gliding. A veteran of the competition hang gliding world circuit, Kraig started

in Los Angeles and with a family and thriving business, his circuit time has diminished, yet remains remarkably fruitful: annually, one competition, one win. Not bad.

24 Soaring Australia

I started competing in 1993 and it quickly became my goal to make the Australian team. I had my first big win in 1996 at the Forbes Flatlands competition. I was 19 at the time.

My first trip to the US was in 1996 and I loved every bit of it. It felt like home to me, just on a bigger scale. I met my wife to be in 1997 which eventually led to me settling in the US in 2000. I took over the Moyes distributorship from Ken Brown in 2007, and have been running it in conjunction with my Specialty Vehicle dealership since.

How many World Championships have you competed in? Four. Australia 1998, Brazil 2003, Australia 2005, United States 2007.

You missed the World’s in Laragne, was that so you can vie for a spot on the US team? I missed the World’s in Laragne due to work committments. It’s not so easy for

January 2011

The best way to prepare for a long competition is to fly. I don’t feel the type of flying (coastal or inland) you do is particularly critical, just as long as you are getting plenty of air time. Having your equipment dialed in is also very important.

When I make a major mistake during a flight I usually take a step back and work on damage control. The natural tendency is to get impatient and try to make up for the error immediately which will usually put you on the ground. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve switched to damage control mode and then ended up winning or finishing in the top few for the day. If I don’t recover from my mistake and have a bad day, I try not to dwell on it too much. The next day is a whole different story, get over it and move on.

What would be your preferred place for a hang gliding World Championship?

Do you have a mentor? There are several pilots that I would consider mentors. Steve Moyes, Tomas Suchanek and Atilla Bertok have all contributed to me becoming a competitive pilot. Kraig with his family at the Grand Canyon

How does hang gliding fit in with your family life? Hang gliding generally isn’t the easiest sport to mix in with family life! It is somewhat selfish in that respect. Having a very understanding wife definitely makes things easier!

Where is your local flying site? My local sites in California are Sylmar, Crestline, Elsinore and Torrey Pines. Kraig with cars from his Specialty Vehicle Dealership

January 2011

2010 Santa Cruz Flats (l-r): Jonny Durand 2nd place (Moyes), Kraig Coomber 1st place (Moyes), Carl Wallbank 3rd place (Moyes)

How do you deal with mistakes – in the air, after the flight, and before the next day of the comp?

Anywhere with consistant weather. I prefer flatlands, but a site that has traditionally consistant weather is key. Forbes, Australia would be great!

What was your first job? My first official job was working at the Moyes Factory. I started test flying for Moyes while I was still in High School. Stanwell Park was their primary test flying site and it was only 15 minutes from where I lived. My school was on a bay so it was easy to keep tabs on the weather. As soon as

How are you preparing yourself for long competitions like the Worlds?

2009 Santa Cruz Flats (l-r): Robin Hamilton 2nd place (Moyes), Kraig Coomber 1st place (Moyes), Derreck Turner 3rd place (Moyes)

Are you interested in any other sports? I like to ride dirt bikes. We have a motocross park nearby that we go to on a pretty regular basis.

What can you recommend to young pilots to improve their skills and performance? Fly as many competitions as you can. Hang gliding is unique in that you can Playing with bikes in his spare time show up to a competition and fly with the best pilots in the world. The top pilots are generally very friendly and are more than willing to offer advice. When you’re flying at your local site, keep a competitive mind set. Challenge yourself with tasks and get familiar with your flight instruments while doing them.

What is your aim in 2011? Compete and finish well in two hang gliding competitions and to work hard and play as often as possible.

Photos: Courtesy Kraig Coomber

Soaring Australia 25


HGFA News

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

2011 Bright Paragliding Open 5 to 12 February 2011 The major goal of the week is to support and encourage intermediate pilots and those new to competition through the following initiatives. Each day will feature a lecture from very experienced pilots (Brian Webb, Andrew Horchner, Craig Collings, Geoff Wong, James Thompson and Mads Syndergaard) on various topics aimed at helping you fly with greater confidence: • Weather and forecasting tools • Mental preparation • Understanding scoring • The value of goal setting • Dealing with fear and making it work for you We aim to provide a mentoring program to intermediate pilots and those new to competition. The idea is to assign a ‘buddy’ to assist pilots in any aspect of competition and their daily preparation in order to get the most from attending this and other competitions. The general focus is on assisting pilots new to competition to get the most they can from each flying day. For more information and to register please go to [www.brightopen.org]. Benn Kovco, Organiser

Women With Wings 2 – Flysafe, Flyfar, Flyfun Skills Clinic 7 to 11 March 2011 This will be a fun, inspiring skills clinic for Aussie women hang and paraglider pilots of all experience levels. The event is held in Bright, Vic, with flying in the Ovens and Kiewa Valleys and with registration on the evening of Sunday 6 March 2011. Cost is $95 Earlybird, $120 later. Headquarters is Camp Krusty (Outdoor Inn, Bright) with camping or cabin accommodation. We have fantastic mentors, instructors and guest lecturers on board, including Brian Webb and Andrew Horchner, Tove Heaney, Craig Collings and Olli Barthelmes. Our HG instructor is the very experienced Tony Barton, so even the newest HG and PG pilots, with only a few hours or who have never flown inland before, will be building their skills in the most supportive and confidence-inspiring environment. At the last WWW event, most particpants had PBs – furthest, highest and longest flights – and came away empowered in their flying and decisionmaking. There will be theory workshops and guest lectures on topics including XC skills, instruments, dealing with fear, human factors/situational awareness and of course lots and lots of flying! 26 Soaring Australia

With funding from the HGFA, State Associations and CASA, earlybird registration fee for participants is a bargain $95 for the full five days flying. Similar skills clinics with full-time instructors normally cost more than $1000! But wait, there’s more: Registration includes a welcoming barbecue and a yummy presentation dinner, club membership, goodie bags, prizes, T-shirts and more! Airborne and Moyes are generously helping out by supplying a few loan gliders to make it more affordable for HG pilots travelling from distant states. We’ve also applied for funding to cover your accommodation expenses and will know in February whether we can make this event even more affordable! To register and pay online (payment via Paypal, credit card or direct deposit) and for more information, go to the website [http://womenwithwingsclinic.blogspot. com/] and join our forum [womenwith wings2@googlegroups.com] to introduce yourself to other female pilots, arrange carpooling, share accommodation, etc. Don’t miss out on this fantastic event. You will gain skills, confidence, inspiration and friends! For more information contact me on <hmckerral@adam.com.au> or telephone 0427 656545. Helen McKerral

CASA News In October 2010, CASA published a Discussion Paper (DP 1006AS) with the title ‘CASA’s Plan for Communication, Navigation and Surveillance Equipage in this decade’. The thrust of the DP is the recommendation that all aircraft operating in Australian airspace be fitted with ADS-B transponders over the coming decade. The HGFA is obviously alarmed and concerned with the content of this DP since, if it were adopted as regulatory policy, it would effectively render the flying disciplines represented by the HGFA as untenable within Australia. The HGFA have formally responded to CASA regarding this DP (see links below). The Australian Sport Aviation Confederation (ASAC) and the other Recreational Aviation Organisations (RAOs), such as the GFA; also strongly oppose the recommendations proposed in DP 1006AS and have responded to CASA accordingly. The HGFA is continuing to work with ASAC and the other RAOs to challenge the recommendations proposed in DP 1006AS. In addition, the HGFA is asking CASA to investigate the use of low cost, low power, GPS based air-to-air alerting devices (ie Flarms) as a viable alternative. To find out more please go to:

• C ASA Discussion Paper (DP 1006AS) short url [http://bit.ly/hWcxQp] • HGFA Response to DP 1006AS short url PDF [http://bit.ly/eBBUye] • ASAC Response to DP 1006AS short url PDF [http://bit.ly/e4RTDK] All pilots would benefit with familiarising themselves with these documents. The HGFA will continue to advise members as discussions proceed.

Clean Up Australia Day Right from the time I started flying about 18 years ago, I was, and am to this day, very impressed with how much the average hang and paraglider pilot cares about keeping our flying sites clear of litter. I’ve seen pilots stop whilst driving up to launch on a lonely bush track to pick up trash someone else had thoughtlessly left on the side of the road. I’ve seen pilots sitting around waiting for the wind to come on, go to their car, return with a handful of trash bags to hand out and without encouragement or coercion everyone starts traipsing around tidying up the rubbish that’s been left lying around. So, we obviously care about our environment, or maybe just our launch sites, and their immediate surrounds – still just as commendable. I don’t know how often the general public realises we do this. I’d imagine that even though we’re most likely the ones keeping our sites tidy, we’d generally be the first assumed responsible if anyone saw any trash lying around. This is where Clean Up Australia Day comes in. The Newcastle Hang Gliding Club has registered a Clean Up Australia Day site at one of our prime flying sites. We have a current project to source a banner with our club logo for just such events, and believe that by being visibly involved in Clean Up Australia Day, the locals near our sites will be more likely to recognise our group as a force for good, rather than an obscure annoyance. The next Clean Up Australia day is not until 6 March 2011. I encourage you to get your club involved in this great cause. If you are unable to attend, you can always donate. I’ll encourage all my workmates to donate, and you can do the same. If you prefer to donate, then feel free to sponsor our clean-up-site at [www.cleanupaustraliaday.org.au/ Hickson+St+Launch+Site]. Dawson Brown, Newcastle HG Club

Integrated Information System IRIS is a web-based system which allows HGFA pilots to submit accident/incident reports at any time, from any location. January 2011

IRIS allows you to report all types of occurrences easily, whether a near miss, accident or a variation from normal procedures. This closed loop system facilitates improved safety through awareness, educate and communication. IRIS has been specifically tailored for use by HGFA members and will form an important part of our Safety Management System. IRIS allows safety occurrences to be addressed by the HGFA and for everyone to receive feedback on how to improve safety. By reporting all occurrences, the HGFA becomes aware of issues, can follow up on them and report back to other pilots. By doing this our lessons learnt become everyone’s lessons learnt. We can all help each other to improve the safety of our sport. The HGFA is running a test program of IRIS. This involves reporting your occurrences on IRIS over the coming weeks. Your participation and feedback will assist in the implementation of IRIS across the entire HGFA. To become involved or for further information contact Chris Drake <Chris.Drake@ hgfa.asn.au> or Sarah FitzGerald (ASN) <sfitzgerald@aerosafe.com.au>.

Airborne Factory Safety Inspections These apply to hang glider wings, microlight wings and trikes. Get peace of mind with a factory safety check of your aircraft for the summer season. We carry out a full frame inspection and bettsometer sail test. A report on any areas requiring attention will be provided and any maintenance can be carried out at the owners request. Fun/Sting $190, high performance glider and trike wing $250, trike base $203, all prices include GST. Scheduled maintenance services are also available, phone for details. Phone spare parts on 02 49449199 to make a booking. Airborne

N ew P roducts New Book and Australian Seminars: Mads Syndergaard Mads has been busy typing away at his pet project this past season – an A to Z guide to competition paragliding. The book covers all aspects of flying comps on a paraglider, from physical and mental preparations before even leaving home, to catching up once the gaggle has had the poor grace to leave you behind. January 2011

Filled with evocative imagery from some of the finest photographers in our little pond, this could be a great gift for this season. The book is sold through XCShop.com and retails for €34.95, and even contains a long bonus section about the history of competition paragliding. Mads will be in Australia in February 2011, courtesy of UP and High Adventure Paragliding. Apart from his book, he’ll be bringing UPs new range of wings for test flights and will be doing seminars of XC flying and competing at chosen venues, starting from Queensland and heading down the coast to arrive for the Bright XC Open. If you wish to attend any of his seminars or test flights, please contact Lee Scott. Free transport and retrieves will be supplied by UP and High Adventure, email <fly@highadventure.com.au> for full details. UP and High Adventure

Skywalk Poison3 Certified Skywalk’s flagship, the Poison, is now in its third generation in sizes M and S with EN-D and respectively LTF-D certification. The bar was already high for the P3, since the Poison2 was such an extraordinary success; consecutive two-time winner in the Serial Class of the German PG League and highly treasured by pilots for its well-balanced flight performance. Skywalk has added highlights to the Poison3, like the optimised AerofabrixAL32 with a double protective coating, improving the mechanical abrasion resistance of the legendary silver cloth. Despite an aspect ratio of 7, the P3 impresses with good balanced handling, which in turn helps to realise the enormous flight performance. The rigid foil elements in the profile nose, in combination with the innovative individual line connections to the risers provide unprecedented stability, above all when accelerated. The Poison3 is certified in the size M from 90 to 110kg and S covers the range from 80 to 100kg. More information at [www.skywalk.info]. Ralf Gittfried, Skywalk Australia

New Lightweight Ascent Vario from USA The new Ascent vario is now available in Australia from Manilla Paragliding. Weighing only 40 grams this small alti/ vario has the same functions as larger heavier units in a 44x60x16mm housing which can be wrist-mounted like a watch It has two altimeters, highly sensitive vario with averager, ft/m selectable, 200

Skywalk Poison3

flight memories (with PC download), and stores max/min temperatures. An internal Lithium Polymer battery gives 10 hours operation and is re-chargeable from 240 plug pack, 12v Cig lighter and USB. The Ascent vario is ideal for those pilots seeking a lightweight easy to use instrument – eg: hike/fly, tandem pilots, Comp/XC pilots back up and, of course, as an everyday unit for those seeking to minimise their equipment. The RRP is $299 including delivery. For more information contact the importer Manilla Paragliding, Godfrey Wenness, ph: 02 67856545 or email <skygodfrey@aol.com>. For info on the web go to [www.flymanilla.com]. Godfrey Wenness

F A I N ews FAI now on Facebook and Twitter The FAI has joined the world of social media. Check out the FAI Facebook page [www.facebook.com/airsports.fai] and become a fan. By connecting with the FAI and air sports fans community on Facebook, you will have the opportunity not only to get updates on all FAI activities, browse videos and pictures, but also share your pictures, open discussions, comment on feeds… We invite you to take an active part in the FAI Facebook page. Another means of keeping in touch with the FAI is to head over to our Twitter page [www.twitter.com/airsports_fai] and follow our tweets. Let’s meet online, whether it be on Facebook or Twitter! Faustine Carrera, FAI Soaring Australia 27


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[www.vintageglidersaustralia.org.au]

AN UNEVENTFUL TRIP!

Urgent phone calls; finally a tow truck operator was contacted (“be there in 20 minutes!”), and we settle down to try and keep the gliders dry in the freezing wet conditions! During the next five hours, and many phone calls, we try to keep warm and dry; fortunately the motor home, on a left lean in the long wet grass, provided some creature comforts.

Dave Goldsmith

Why, oh why, had I unloaded all our clothing and dry socks the previous evening? Finally the tow truck arrives and with some difficulty the large trailer is loaded. “Not taking that to Bacchus Marsh, too unstable,” the driver announces. Fortunately he agrees to try for Melton, where his day job as a welder allows the trailer to be repaired.

We tow the trailer to the Bruce Brockhoff Annexe at Bacchus airfield, and with John Ashford’s help unload and dry off the gliders before they sustain serious damage. Driving home cold and tired late that night, I vowed to never again call a trip successful until it is REALLY over!

Photos: David Goldsmith

‘Webfoot’ Melbourne Cup Vintage Rally – 30 October to 2 November 2010 Jenne Goldsmith – Reprinted from Vintage Times issue 120

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An overnight stop

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he story was relayed to Australian Gliding Museum committee members by email late on Thursday evening, 14 October. “We are back home in Gisborne after an uneventful trip.” Little was I to know how this comment was to tempt fate! The museum had been trying to get two historic gliders, a Grunau Baby and a Kestrel, from the Gliding Club of Western Australia back to Bacchus Marsh, for about 18 months. It was within 15 minutes of happening five months ago, however my truck-driver friend could not proceed when his yard foreman was sacked just as the trip was to commence! Finally, Jenne and I decided that here was a chance to combine business and pleasure; visit WA and bring them back ourselves! Bertha the Bedford had been recently superseded by a nice Avan motor home on a turbo-diesel Fiat, and Ian Patching kindly offered his enclosed Longwing Kookaburra trailer. The trip went well, and to cut a long story short, we dropped the trailer at Cunderdin and enjoyed the tourist trail in the south-west for nine wonderful days. We were delighted to spend time and meet members of the Narrogin Gliding

Loading the trailer on the tow truck

28 Soaring Australia

The Kestrel in the rafters at Cunderdin

Club, the Beverley Soaring Society and the Gliding Club of WA, as well as Balaclava Gliding Club and Waikerie Gliding Club en-route. Thanks again for your wonderful hospitality, guys and girls! After extracting the Kestrel from the rafters of the hangar and loading the gliders at Cunderdin, we drove back to Gisborne. All up, 8350km exactly. Then I sent out the fateful arrival advice mentioned above! Next morning after a good sleep I visit the post office to collect the mail, in pouring rain, when Jenne rings – Mayday! – the trailer is leaking like a sieve on the exposed wooden gliders within; we have to get them under cover and dry at Bacchus Marsh asap! I rush home and

we head off on the 30-minute trip, Jenne having placed plastic sheeting and buckets strategically, including above the exposed spars of the Kestrel! Heading down the steep hill near home, at a reduced speed because of the severe conditions, I notice the trailer trying to overtake our vehicle on the right hand side! Slowing to a stop, we park on the restricted area beside the road, double yellow lines on a slight crest! Jenne puts out the safety alert triangle, which blows away in the wind. The rain continues unabated, the buckets are not coping, and we find the drawbar welding has given away and we are going nowhere!

Grunau Baby and Kestrel safely installed in the museum, awaiting restoration to display standard

January 2011

n weather better suited to ducks, the Vintage Gliders Australia Melbourne Cup Rally 2010 was held over four days at Bacchus Marsh on the long weekend of Saturday, 30 October to Tuesday, 2 November last year. The Australian Gliding Museum contributed greatly to the occasion by holding an open day on the Sunday at their Bruce Brockhoff annexe on the field. The weather bureau, in the days leading up to the event, made very clear their expectation of flooding rain over the weekend. It is true that their dire warnings did induce some to leave their gliders at home but let it not be said that all in vintage circles are not of highly optimistic nature, or don’t possess a healthy dose of scepticism when it comes to forecasts, or, heaven forbid, lack enthusiasm to fly! Despite the diabolical nature of the said forecast, there were two vintage gliders (Ka4 and Boomerang) lined up at the launch point ready to fly early on Saturday morning. It was only the tardy arrival of the rostered tug pilot (can’t imagine WHY he was so tardy) that caused there to be no vintage aviating to occur on the first day of the rally. With not a small measure of disappointment the aircraft were returned to their hangars about midday when it became obvious that maybe the heavens were going to open shortly thereafter; a remarkably accurately forecast. And indeed they did! It pelted down, and just when you thought it couldn’t possibly get any heavier it drummed even louder on the hangar roof. Webbed feet and well-oiled feathers became a distinct advantage for anyone wanting to get around outside. A car was bogged up to its axle when it departed from the gravel near the Museum. Lakes and rivers of January 2011

water appeared as it was sadly decided that the Museum would probably not be able to fly its T31 on its open day after all. Some even worried that maybe not enough people would come to make up a quorum for the annual general meeting that was planned for the day as well. Sunday dawned grey and raining, but the latter worry proved completely needless. Over 40 people from four states turned up for the meeting and open day, despite the weather. At the AGM, Alan Patching stepped down as president, with David Goldsmith now taking that position. Bernard Duckworth, son of gliding pioneer Dick Duckworth, was elected to the committee, with all other committee members being re-elected. The hangar talk was lively as people marvelled at the progress the museum has made during the 10 years since its inception and inspected its highly significant collection of aircraft, archive centre, and display of the Dick Duckworth collection of photographs. Firsthand stories from some about their experiences of flying some of the exhibits added rich colour to the history on display. Monday dawned blue and sunny; the rivers of water had stopped running the previous day but the lakes, though receding, still abounded. We assumed that the field would be too wet to fly and set about some work in the Museum. Tantalising cumulus appeared overhead, and our rostered duty instructor for the day, Martin Power (now a new VGA member, welcome Martin!), appeared on the field. Not one deficient in enthusiasm, as befits a VGA member, Martin walked the runway and declared enough of it dry enough to fly. The Vintage Gliders Australia Ka 4 Rhoenlerche II was quickly DI’d and taken out to the launch point with some very pleasant flying ensuing in rather unusual

Alan Patching, Wayne Mackley, Lee Cowie and Dave Schuur with the Platypus

circumstances for Bacchus Marsh – we had the sky almost to ourselves! A Cessna 150 flew in to do a couple of circuits before leaving again and a Decathlon shared the air for a short while, otherwise it was just the Ka4, trusty Super Cub tug MSA, the ibis and the eagles. John Mackley put the Ka4 to its best use as a trainer and did some aerotow training with instructor Ross Birch before David and I took it away for a magic 46 minutes up to cloud base of 4300ft. The cu worked reliably and the ibis showed where the best bits were, the Ka 4 giving the lie to the rather unkind nickname the type had earned in Germany of ‘Rhoenstein’, translating to ‘Rhoen rock’ in English (the Rhoen is the region in Germany that gave birth to the Ka4, the fourth design of Rudolf Kaiser, which was factory named the ‘Rhoenlerche II’, meaning ‘Rhoen-Lark II’ in English). We explored its very pleasant flight characteristics with some chandelles, stalls and steep turns to get down and allow John Buchanan and Martin to take it up for another three quarters of an hour before putting her safely back to bed. The last day of the rally (Cup Day) gave us the field completely to ourselves, no power traffic at all except for our tug. Two different vintage birds came out to play, the ASK 13 VH-GPZ belonging to the Geelong Gliding Club, and the Boomerang VH-GTR owned by Theo Van Alkemade. John Mackley explored spins with Martin in VH-GPZ, the look upstairs Soaring Australia 29


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showing them that there were quite a few scattered rain showers about. Despite that, the lift was quite good, at times up to a maximum altitude of 3700ft, with David and I coming back, brakes out, after three-quarters-of-an hour. Sylvia Sharman reacquainted herself with a glider again in VH-GPZ with Martin after many years break since she last flew her Ka 6 in England. Ian Patching flew over an hour in the Boomerang VH-GTR, during which he shared some good air with an eagle formatting on his wingtip, before a rain Ross Birch and John Mackley in the VGA Ka4

Photos: David Goldsmith

shower and associated sink forced him home. Caleb White then took VH-GTR up for another 35 minutes in an interesting flight during which he soared along the line of a front in a compromise between weak lift and light drizzle, before pushing through heavier rain to come home. By then we decided that the rain was beating us and it was time to put the birds to bed and repair to the clubhouse. All in all it was an interesting rally, the wet of which I don’t think we have ever seen before. It was great to see the many people who turned up anyway; the Museum open day adding great interest to the event.

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The manual said ‘starboard wing first’; Kevin Rodda and Eric Dickeson guiding the wing root under the expert supervision of Bert Persson. The other helpers in this photo are Mark Higgins, Mick Moloney, Bernard ‘Speedy’ Gonzalves and Mike Grady

Proud owner Kevin Rodda with the 1-35 rigged for the first time in 22 years

Jack Iggulden was born in 1917 in Melbourne. During the Great Depression he left school aged 13 to work in the family business, Planet Lighting, a company

factory and drove around the Victorian countryside throwing and selling them.

Bert has it all sorted out. The wings have not needed the paint to be touched up; they have been washed but not yet even polished!

U n i t e d S tat e s Vi n ta g e Gliding Enthusiasts Vi s i t B a c c h u s M a r s h Six members and friends of the United States Vintage Soaring Association visited Bacchus Marsh on Sunday 7 November: Dave and Betty Schuur, Lee and Mary Cowie, and Bill and Geneva Jokerst with the Wabash Valley Soaring Association. David flies a Ka6E, Lee a 1947 Grunau Baby IIb, and Mary flies her ASK-18. The weather was a little threatening – maybe a seven day cycle from the previous wet rally weekend – but some good flying was done by the visitors, who flew the VGA Ka4 or the syndicate Platypus, some having a flight in each. The day was soarable, but the lively flying in the breeze kept our visitors on their toes. Late in the day a line of rain showers moved threateningly towards the launch point, and a tactical withdrawal of the gliding operations brought the flying to a close. Whilst at Bacchus the visitors also inspected gliders in the Australian Gliding Museum, and admired the unique Zephyrus belonging to the Beaufort Club.

Photos: Gary Smith and Bernard Gonzalves

30 Soaring Australia

Kelly Rees, granddaughter of Jack Iggulden

he, his father and brother made boomerangs in the

Reprinted from Vintage Times Issue 120 and the Caboolture Gliding Club website [www.glidingcaboolture.org.au] being re-aligned back through instruments that had to be re-arranged to give the cable clearance to the control panel) and to repair some ‘hard landing’ damage to the underside of the fuselage at the skid. The huge tail-wheel assembly that had been fitted to the 1-35 (with its 8” diameter pneumatic-tyred wheel) has also been replaced with a much, much smaller original Schweizer 1-35 tail-wheel assembly (with a 2” solid rubber-tyred wheel). The improvement that this will make to the 1-35’s attitude in ground roll for take-off should be dramatic. In recent weeks, Bernard ‘Speedy’ Gonzalves has been applying his magic to the paintwork to the fuselage, tail-fin and turtle-deck. ‘The pocket rocket’ is getting close to being back in the air; it was re-rigged on 31 October last year for the first time in some 22 years. Bert Persson is very excited about taking his next flight in VH-WUC very soon – an aircraft that he flew during his time with Bill Riley and Ingo Renner at Tocumwal. Bert fondly recalls his first flight in VH-WUC where, after finding a few unexpected thermals early in the flight, he pushed on to complete a leisurely 500km triangle! The aircraft last flew in 1988 after being imported from the USA in 1977 and located at Tocumwal by its original Sydney based owner, the late Keith ‘Nearly’ Woodward.

Iggulden – An Australian Gliding Legend, 12 February 1917 to 8 October 2010

his father had established in 1911. To make ends meet,

Schweizer 1-35 Rigged

ert Persson has over recent months applied many, many hours of his unique engineering expertise, experience and wizardry to Kevin Rodda’s Schweizer SGS 1-35 (VH-WUC). The major challenges were the reengineering required to replace the original Schweizer self-retracting tow release with a GFA approved Tost release (requiring the tow release cable to be re-directed to provide initial forward pull before

Final Glide: John ‘Jack’ Manners

January 2011

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n 1942, Jack married Helen, and their partnership continued until his death 68 years later. Jack was an avid glider pilot. He and his brother built their first glider in their bedroom, with the wings extending across the entrance hall and into the lounge of the family home. In 1959, Jack was Australian National gliding champion and, in 1963, represented Australia in the World Gliding Championships in Argentina. He was the founding member of the Australian National Gilding School and its director for several years. Jack wrote the Manual of Standard Procedure for glider training. The manual, still in use today, is thought to have saved many lives and contributed to the high level of safety of Australian gliding. Jack became Life Governor of the Gliding Federation of Australia in 1965. He is still considered a legend within the sport. In 1970, Jack was the founding president of the Port Phillip Conservation Council. In 1972, he was arrested for his part in a major demonstration opposing a pipeline by Esso-BHP across Port Phillip Bay, Melbourne (Jack’s earlier effort to stop work by parking his car across the pipeline easement and leaving it locked up for several days having, unsurprisingly, failed). In the day, this was a major environmental battle. In 1974, Jack moved his family and the family business, Planet Lighting, to Bellingen. He continued to work at Planet Lighting January 2011

until in his 80s. In Bellingen, Jack was involved in campaigns to oppose the demolition of the old community centre, plans to take water out of the Bellinger River to supply Coffs Harbour, and efforts to keep Bellingen Hospital open. In all of these campaigns, Helen was an equal partner. Jack Iggulden had several novels published in the 60s in Australia, England and the USA and translated into other languages. His novels were studied in several Australian universities. The books include ‘The Storms of Summer’ (1960), ‘Breakthrough’ (1963), ‘The Clouded Sky’ (1964), ‘Dark Stranger’ (1965), ‘The Promised Land Papers’ (three volumes, 1986-1993) and ‘Silent Lies’ (1996). Jack published several books on economics and determinedly completed 14 volumes of memoirs in his later years. Jack was an ardent fan of jazz and his 2BBB Saturday night radio programme, ‘Jazz Thoughts’, ran for many years. He was one of many jazz lovers in Bellingen that encouraged the live performance of jazz artists, sponsored by Planet Lighting. This encouraged a significant interest in jazz in Bellingen, which led to the Bellingen Jazz Festival. At his death, Jack remained patron of the Bellingen Jazz Society. Jack is survived by his wife Helen, daughters Roberta and Kari, nine grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Jack’s first child, Graham, died in 1951 aged seven years, a loss which was never far from Jack’s thoughts.

A young Jack Iggulden

Jack Iggulden, Eric Edenback and Lawrie Lynch at the second National Gliding School, Gawler, held from 17 October to 1 November 1959 Photo from the Kevin Gillespie slide collection

Jack Iggulden and Alan Patching, Gawler, 1959 Photo from the Kevin Gillespie slide collection

Soaring Australia 31


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What’s ‘Overdevelop’? Peter Davies It was 8:30 in the morning of Friday, 5 April 1985. Col, Trev and I were enjoying breakfast in the Porepunkah roadhouse when John Reynoldson came in to pay for some fuel. He called out to us as he left, “you better get yourselves up the hill as it is going to overdevelop.” We called out “thanks,” and “see you later,” and then collectively said to each other, “what does ‘overdevelop’ mean?” We decided to get a move on as ‘Renno’ made it look like haste was a good idea and promised ourselves to look up ‘overdevelop’ at some stage later.

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hen we arrived at Mt. Buffalo launch, all of the other pilots were lined up ready to go. We felt that this was a little unusual as it was only 11am and the best part of the day was still two hours away. The sky looked awesome with lots of big white fluffy cumulus. They were so incredibly white, looking at them hurt your eyes, and they looked alive against the clear blue sky as they silently billowed and puffed. We wanted to get in the air as quickly as we could because each of the other pilots who had launched were all instantly and magically hoisted vertically skywards at an amazing rate. We were also the newbies of the group so we wanted to keep the guns in sight, but this was not going to be the case as halfway through our set-up the guns were all long gone. There were just the three of us left on take-off. Col was set up first and was ready to launch. I had never seen a guy stuff battens while still carrying his glider to take-off before! I was next and Trev, being only a Hang 3, was going to drive the car down and pick us up after our XC epic. That was the totality of our plan. What could possibly go wrong? There was a good consistent breeze, but the launch came on with a vengeance when the thermals came through! We decided to wait until a thermal had passed and to launch between instead of into the beginning of a cycle. Col blasted off the ramp like a top fuel dragster and I followed right behind him so we both got off into the same bit of air which was going nowhere. This was unexpected as the other guys had shot straight up. We circled around

32 Soaring Australia

in zero and a little up for a few minutes. Col went right and I went left. Soon after we separated we both hit strong lift. The vario was chirping away nicely and we were at 4500ft and cloudbase before we knew it. Again, this was a little unexpected as I was sure the other guys got much higher than this. I guess the greyish black clouds we were now flying under weren’t as high or lifty as the earlier white ones. I radioed to Col, “Where do you want to go?” and he responded somewhat agitated: “West, go west.” I asked him if there was anything wrong and he just yelled: “Look at Porepunkah airstrip.” This was somewhat difficult as everything to the east of the right spur from Buffalo was hidden behind a sheet of water! The heavens had opened and we were right in the middle of being chased down by a thunderstorm stretching from south to north as far as the eye could see. I radioed back to Col, “Let’s head to Myrtleford, FAST!” With Col a couple of k’s behind, higher and further to the north, I pointed the nose west and stuffed the bar. I was worried about my lack of speed (no VG in a Probe II) and my ability to get down before the storm caught me, but this soon became a secondary worry. All the time I had been just under the clouds and now I was at 5500ft in what looked like the top of a gigantic upturned bowl. The centre of the cloud I was under was sucking itself higher and me along with it! I was now looking down over the left spur and heading out to the valley when the ground disappeared. I was in the cloud good and solid with a climb rate of 500ft/min and there was nothing I could do about it. If I eased off the

speed, the climb rate went to over 800ft/ min. I radioed Col and he confirmed that he was in the same predicament. I told him to follow his compass and keep his control movements to a minimum to avoid a turn. He radioed back, ”I don’t have a compass.” The air was thankfully reasonably calm and my compass was a large floating ‘Ball’ marine style unit, so I was able to use it as a direction indicator as well as a crude artificial horizon. With my heart in my throat and my eyes glued to my compass I prayed for salvation. The storm was not going to be beaten easily as it decided to unleash another weapon – lightning. What started off as a few rumbles of thunder followed by a flickering sheet of white quickly gained momentum and became absolutely furious. From the placement of the thunder and lightening, the storms location seemed to be north-east of me and from this I guessed the storm was moving to the north away from me, but heading right for Col. Col was in a real mess now as he had no idea where he was or where he was going. We had both been in cloud for over 10 minutes. He radioed back that he was holding the glider at trim and going up at 650ft/min and doing 65mph. Later we concluded that the only way this could happen was if he was in a radical sideslipping turn in rapidly rising air. Could it get any worse? Yes, it could. Col must have unintentionally flown back towards take-off and into the eye of the storm. The lightening was so close and so violent that it was burning his eyes with every bolt. Col would surely have been blinded temporarily and perhaps unable to see or land if not for the dark January 2011

‘Bolle’ glasses with the side-covering leather flaps he was wearing. These are as close to welding goggles as you can get and just as well, because he was receiving the equivalent of welders flash with every lightning bolt. This was perhaps the most frightening aspect of the whole ordeal. Lightning bolts blasting past you close enough to touch! My vario would freak out with every bolt and the needle was wavering around as if the instrument was displaying levels of electrical field strength rather than displaying my vertical climb or, preferably, sink. I moved my focus from my vario to my mechanical and therefore reliable altimeter which now displayed 6800ft. Our AM band CBs were being triggered by the lightening as well, but thankfully neither of us could hear each others high pitched screams. This was incredibly eerie as now we had the thunder all around us and in our heads as well. I had now been over 15 minutes in the cloud. I was heading west with the bar at my shoulders and mostly in control and Col was in a state of complete vertigo. He radioed to me that he was going to use his body as a pendulum and when he was hanging straight down, fly the glider in that direction. He released the VG on his GTR and let go. He swung across to the right downtube. He grabbed the basebar and rolled across to the left, straightened up and let go. He swung across to the right downtube again. Col then heaved the basebar to the right and jammed his left shoulder against the left downtube and held it there until the wind noise dropped. He let go again. He swung to the right of centre, but this was enough to determine where straight and level was. He centred the bar and flew off into more of the unknown, always testing his direction by releasing the basebar and correcting for any offset from a vertical hang. There was a real danger now that as I was heading away from Buffalo Col could have flown right back over it with all of its rocky outcrops and monstrous trees to come down in. Col radioed his progress and he felt he was flying away from the storm as the lightning seemed further away. Then it happened, I know what Columbus felt when he saw land for the first time after a year of travel! Out of the mist I got a glimpse of ground, but as soon as it appeared it was gone. I saw enough to know I was over the Ovens valley and on my way to Myrtleford, or something that looked a lot like that. January 2011

I popped out of the cloud again and I could see that I was flying down the side of the upturned bowl of a cloud and this is really when I understood the size of the storm we had been in, as the base of the cloud had to be several kilometres across. I flew at maximum speed, watching intently as the ground faded in and out of view, and for the first time in an eternity I was going down! My flight path saw me following the side of this great bowl and my sink rate increased at a greater rate the further I got away from the centre. I radioed to Trev that I was going to be okay and I was going to land on the Ovens highway somewhere between Ovens and Myrtleford and that he should chase Colin. Trev radioed back that he had to pull over to the side of the road halfway down the hill as the rain was so strong, visibility was zero and water was pumping into the car through a crack in the windscreen and any other gap that was not pressure-tested, and the car was filling up with water like he had driven off a pier and into the bay. I went on a heading to take me as far away from the storm as possible and only made one turn at the end of this glide into wind and, ironically, did a one-step landing facing back towards Buffalo in a light breeze. I guy called Paul saw me land and came over with a beer. Some kids came over as well and the surreal nature of the whole event kicked in when they asked all of the usual questions. How to you explain something like this to a non-pilot? As I was packing my gear up at record pace and babbling incoherently about cloud suck, lightening and Colin still being up there, he suggested to come back to his place, “cause it sounds like you guys could really do with some serious unwinding.” I accepted his kind offer on the proviso that when we found Colin, we would have something left to bring back. I heard Trev crackle over the radio, so I gave him my position and he arrived shortly after. Col had been on the radio as well and he was now ahead of the storm and able to see that he was in Happy valley where he intended to be land in record time. We threw the glider on the roof and jumped into the car which had an inch of water sloshing around on the floor and sped off to Happy valley. We found Col easily and when we got closer to him, it was clear that the storm had one more surprise left. He was absolutely soaked! He had come in

on final into wind but going backwards, and after he had run out his landing in reverse, had just enough time to climb out on the front flying wires, unhook them and pull the glider down on top of himself before the gust front hit and the rain came down. Col got out of his harness and helmet which had filled with over an inch of water as it lay on the ground, and he lay under the glider until the rain stopped. He was whiter than the early clouds and had difficulty seeing as there were white spots wherever he looked. He was surprisingly calm considering and we packed up his glider as he checked out his gear for rain damage and dried it as best he could. We then travelled back to Paul’s place where we recounted the whole day and the meaning of ‘overdevelop’ over a few beers and thanked whoever or whatever looks over drunks, children and dumb hang glider pilots. P.S.: Col was diagnosed with the equivalent of welder’s flash and had to take eye drops and wear his Bolle’s day and night for the next week until his sensitivity to light returned to normal. He made quite a sight jumping about on the dance floor at the Alpine in Bright at 2am!

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HGFA President’s Report

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‘Buddy’ Hang Checks And Pre-flights Stanwell Park HG and PG Club Safety Committee

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ecently a paraglider pilot from Bright died having not done up his leg straps. To avoid this sad incident repeating, we have come up with a helpful preflight safety check card that paragliders can attach to their harness and hang glider pilots can stick on their downtube as a reminder. Hang glider pilots seem to be taught from the beginning to employ a buddy to help them double-check the important things before launching; the ‘Hang

Check’. We’d like to see ALL pilots practice this safety measure. We fear that the top landing option at Bald Hill makes our members particularly prone to set-up errors because you land, chat, get distracted and launch again. Each time you’re ready to relaunch, make sure you “Check From Head To Toe, Before You Go!”

Paraglider Pilots Consider leaving one leg strap done up permanently so you have to step into

your harness. It’s a bit inconvenient, but it will stop you from falling out of your harness if you forget to clip in. Be extra careful with race harnesses as they are designed for a layback flying position, making it absolutely impossible to recover if leg straps are not secured. Flight decks can block your vision when doing a pre-flight inspection and you may overlook doing up your leg straps.

All Pilots Should a mobile telephone call (or anything else) distract you from your preflight, start again. Or,even better, make turning your mobile phone off the first step in your pre-flight. One of the best practices is to develop a routine in setting up, pre-flight and prelaunch checks. This also applies to packing up which will complete your safety cycle. Fly safe.

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he last year has been somewhat tumultuous as far as the management of the HGFA has been concerned. Just over 12 months has seen the complete change of the committee, four different Operations Managers, two Presidents (and a partridge in a pear tree). What has remained consistent is what I believe the core strength of our organisation, ie, the individual pilots and their attitude to their chosen form of aviation. This attitude of mentoring new pilots and using peer pressure to influence pilots to make the right (safe) decisions at our flying sites has helped keep our accident/incident rate from increasing. Remember; every time you clip in to ask the question: “Have I considered everything I need to in order ensure that I have given myself the best possible chance of committing aviation safely?” As the current committee seeks to address the many and varied demands on it by members and statutory authorities we are often confronted with markedly different expectations and trying to balance these is a real art form. During this period the Committee has met twice (physically) and had numerous regular (usually weekly) webinars to

discuss matters arising. Committee members have individually attended meetings with CASA staff, ASAC meetings and forums run by CASA for RAOs. Many volunteer hours have been consumed in dealing with matters that on the surface would have little relevance to the pilot on site. I can assure you, however, that if these matters aren’t dealt with, they could have a profound impact on pilots’ enjoyment of the sport. The issues relating to VHF radios & transponders come to mind. Notwithstanding the demands on time that volunteering brings with it, I am always amazed at the depth of talent and goodwill there is amongst the pilot community to contribute. Thank you for that! I would like to make special mention of the contribution of Craig Worth who passed away recently. Craig has been around the sport in many capacities over the last 30 years. He is the guy that stepped into the Operations Manager’s position after the departure of Chris Fogg and with his past experience helped to steady the ship. Craig’s attitude, depth of knowledge and understanding of the pilot’s ‘psyche’ was invaluable to the committee. He was a genuinely good

• • • • • • • • • • • • • •

bloke and he will be missed by all who knew him. My sincere sympathy and condolences go to Suzie and his family. 2011 will bring new challenges and some ‘old’ business carried over from 2010. I believe we will have a new Operations Manager commencing in January who will be pivotal in implementing the improvements and changes required to keep the HGFA relevant as a representative organisation. Key objectives for 2011 will be: • Finalise the Operations Manual • Formalise the Memorandum of Understanding with RAAus regarding trike operations • Undertake facility audits • Review of Soaring Australia • Determination of funding arrangements for different disciplines within HGFA 2011 will also bring an election of members to the committee (yes, already) so please give serious consideration to who is representing you, what they are doing and how well they are doing it before you nominate or vote! In the remainder of my term I will endeavour to communicate with as many clubs, schools and pilots across Australia seeking feedback on what things are important to you. Rob Woodward

Vale: Craig Worth Martin Halford

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he HGFA is very sad to advise that Craig Worth passed away on Saturday 27 November after a long battle with cancer. Craig had a very long history with the HGFA and acted as the organisation’s Operations\General Manager for many years. His contribution to the association, to its pilots and the sports of hang gliding, paragliding and weightshift microlighting were substantial and too numerous to mention in a few short paragraphs. However, suffice to say, if it were not for Craig’s efforts during his involvement with the sport, we would not be enjoying the relative freedoms of flying HG and PG in Australia that we do today!

34 Soaring Australia

January 2011

January 2011

Craig was passionate about the HGFA and the sport in general. After a number of years away from the Operations Manager’s role, he stepped back into the position late last year, working through until July this year, to help the new Committee through the recent period of transition. His contribution to the HGFA is very much appreciated and he will be sadly missed by all who knew him.

Craig Worth

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Mt Beauty Gliding Club New Zealand Expedition 2010

flying through saddles get one over the ridge. Take care!

The gliding

Reprinted from MBGC Newsletter [www.exalander.com/mbgc/mbgcnewspage.htm] In November 2010, Mt Beauty Gliding Club MBGC) members Mark Bland, Kitty Vigo, and Ian Cohn went to Omarama, New Zealand, to glide and have fun. They were accompanied by Alan Wilson from the Canberra Gliding Club, Susie Cohn and Dave Vigo. Here are their stories.

Mark Bland in the Omarama Gliding Club Duo Discus nearing Mt Cook Photo: Alan Wilson

A l a n Wi l s o n I was fortunate to be a member of the contingent of Australians who travelled to Omarama. The leader of the pack was Mark Bland who has made the trip three

times before. Mark made most of the arrangements and exhorted three other pilots to attend. That week, local identity Jerry O’Neill coordinates a week of mountain flying and runs a daily seminar on Omarama, slope soaring, wave flying other techniques applicable in the region and, believe me, it is well worth attending. The course also ensures there are plenty of pilots and gliders around to assist new chums. While I completed the FAI Diamond in 1978 I learnt heaps. Omarama, of course, is a famous gliding site in the middle of the south island of New Zealand. The airfield is a huge grass east/west runway more than a mile long in the middle of a valley, with

Typical NZ terrain looking north from Lake Ohau along the Dobson River with Mt Cook in the distance Pohto: Alan Wilson

36 Soaring Australia

close peaks north and south towering 4000ft or more above. There is hangarage for perhaps 100 gliders, and the locals own ‘chalets’ on the airfield. A lifestyle to be believed: walk to your favourite fly fishing spot at 6am, bike up a 3000ft climb and scream down in seven minutes; only then should you have breakfast and consider gliding. Anyway I digress: Gliding is the reason we were at Omarama. Some 15 locals brought their [club] gliders along to learn, then fly. The Omarama professionals at Glide Omarama briefed the weather comprehensively at 1000 then Jerry led a 50-minute talk on flying in the region. At 1300 or so we launched and the sun set at about 2030. Techniques discussed included: Slope soaring: Get in close to the ridge, making sure to reduce a 90-degree approach to 30 in plenty of time, fly 30kt above stall to ensure manoeuvrability in turbulence and slope soar to the point when you can ‘dominate the ridge’; ie, fly over the peaks and enjoy the convergence of lift coming up both sides, noting the rocks are obscured directly below your ankles! Wave soaring: That is pretty standard stuff to Aussies; fly 270 +/- 30. Use GPS to mark the hot spot, keep going west till it hurts, etc. But the NZ wavelength is short; expect lift high over the down slope, or near where the cloud appears to roll over the ridge and down the slope. Hard to believe, but that is where it was. Tricks and points: In mountains the far distant horizon is disrupted, but the snow line is a good horizon, and if low enough the tree line, but there were not many trees. Wind increases over saddles so fly out in front, but the conundrum is January 2011

We arrived and I planned to fly dual because I don’t need to be a member of yet another club, and certainly don’t need another club joining fee for two weeks of gliding. In Australia, three months’ GFA membership and a flight check is all that is required. A pleasant surprise, I soon found an LS4 for private hire and achieved the Australian norm. Another pleasant surprise was friendly ATC who would try hard to grant clearance high into controlled airspace. The gliding was absolutely fantastic! I generally flew for five hours, over ridges as far as I dared, even marginally further. The Dingles, about 40km west, has peaks 6000ft above local terrain that is simply tiger country, so I stayed high with options to the east. I was a regular over Lindis Pass, slope soaring with options to known croppy strips, and down the Dunstans. The Ben Ohau ridge climbs gently for 40km, 5000ft in the south to 8000ft peaks in the north. All along the ridge one generally has final glide to Omarama (providing one flew intelligently and never downwind of a ridge). Simply fantastic and scary to be so close to ugly craggy rocks. And the epitome: Over Mt Cook at 16000ft even though it was somewhere down there below or in the clouds. Six days 35 hours, all great fun and well out of my flat land comfort zone. Ian Cohn missed Diamond height by 400ft one day, but got the Diamond with a climb to 20000ft on Saturday, well done Ian. Many thanks to the people at Omarama: Jerry, Don, Paul, Frank, Tom and numerous others, and please give the same friendly reception to other Aussies who will make the trip. So much fun; so little time.

Mark Bl and In 2007, encouraged by Frank Saxton, myself and fellow Aussie club pilot Ian Cohn took the opportunity to join in with Jerry O’Neil’s Omarama cross-country course. From Mt Beauty in north-east Victoria, we managed to hire a Libelle from Five Rivers and had a fantastic time. We were both familiar with hill flying from our home club but learning about the complexities of the NZ weather and the much more rugged mountains it was great to join in with a group of experi-

Ian Cohn flying LS-6 GWC along the Ben Ohau ridge

enced Kiwi pilots also looking at improving their mountain cross-country skills. Jerry has voluntarily run these courses for many years and, together with Ivan Evans and several other guru pilots, has done a terrific job of coaching others to fly safely in the mountains. I returned again in 2009 and have just attended the November 2010 course. Joining the Omarama Gliding Club helped us obtain some gliders to fly. This year’s course once again lived up to expectation with crosscountry flights every day. Including the Australians, there were close to 20 pilots including regulars from Nelson, Canterbury and Alexandra. Every day after listening to Lemmy Weather,

Photo: Mark Bland

generously provided by Lemmy Tanner from Glide Omarama, we would have our own briefing with Jerry giving an hour’s talk on subjects such as the essential choosing of safe land-out strips, ridge flying and mountain thermal sources.

The OLC rendition of Ian Cohen’s flight showing a maximum altitude of 6100m

January 2011

Soaring Australia 37


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Mt Cook close up

Photo: Ian Cohn

Kitty and Mark in the Duo Discus above the Dobson Valley

Photo: Ian Cohn

Most important for we Aussies were the techniques for wave flying and the dynamics for finding it! The first few days were mainly thermal and ridge days around the Omarama Basin with some going south to Cromwell and north up the Ben Ohau’s. Tuesday produced blue wave to about 12 to 13 000ft and many managed to ridge fly Mt Cook. Saturday the 13 November (the Regional’s practice day) topped off a great week for us with Mt Beauty member Ian Cohn finally getting his Diamond height after 48 years gliding. Congratulations also to Oliver (OGC) and Paul Jackson (Canterbury GC) on completing their first 300km flights. It must have been a reasonable day, however, as Terry Delore had a casual flight down

38 Soaring Australia

to Stewart Island just to demonstrate his superiority! Sitting on the flight back to Melbourne, writing this and having just flown over 40 hours in the past 10 days I’m still yearning for more and hope to be back next year with maybe a few more Aussies. Many thanks must go to Jerry O’Neil and also Yvonne Loader, Don Mallinson, Geoff Soper, Hugh Turner and all the others who assisted us. The camaraderie of flying with many other club pilots keen to improve is inspiring.

Ian Cohn Having started my gliding career in January 1962, about 48 years ago, my main motive for going to Omarama for a second time was to try for the remain-

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ing leg of the FAI Diamond badge, the requirement for a 5000m gain of height. After a check flight with Don Mallinson on 3 November, I flew the OGC LS-6 17.5 on great flights around the local Omarama area, rarely getting out of glide range of Omarama. It’s possible to go a long way doing this when average operating heights are around 8500ft above Omarama. On a couple of days there was wave available and I actually climbed to 18 500ft on one day, just short of the Diamond height gain requirement. On another frustrating day I climbed to 15 000ft in good lift only to have it cut off by some kind of wind shear effect. On another day I completed the set 300km task to Cromwell and ‘the wall’ up the Dobson river valley. I was actually quite courageous doing this because many of the local gurus did not go to Cromwell due to extensive over development. After getting on the wrong (lee) side of the Dunstan range following the sunny areas coming back from Cromwell, I actually sank relatively low near a notorious sink hole called Stew's Gully (only about 40km from Omarama, but around 500km by road) but was saved the embarrassment of a 500km retrieve by a good thermal which allowed me to get on to the St Bathans Range and climb in good ridge lift. The Diamond height gain flight was done on our second last day at Omarama. I started off really slowly on Mt St Cuthbert (Horrible) only climbing to around 5500ft several times and pushing out west to the enticing wave clouds only to strike heavy sink and having to scurry back. After about an hour-and-a-half I climbed to around 7000ft on Horrible and flew out to the Ewe range where I eventually thermalled up into the wave with about seven other sailplanes. Striking out northwards I eventually arrived at a well-developed classic lenticular wave cloud and latched on to good lift in the wave, climbing to an altimeter height of 19500ft which I calculated should give me a margin of around 500ft . The GPS height was registered at 20000ft. The rest of the flight was a scenic tour up to the Tasman glacier and return to Omarama. For those interested, my flights are logged on the On Line Contest site at [www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0/gliding/ flightbook.html?sp=2011&st=olcp&rt=olc &pi=22734].

January 2011

Winch Versus Aerotow, Costs To Solo Colin Campbell Try convincing members of a gliding club which has operated a winch since its inauguration over 30 years ago, to consider migrating to aerotow.

I

was going to preface this report with a quote from George Bernard Shaw about the unreasonable man being the driver of all progress, but my search of the net did not yield the text. I might also have overdone the unreasonable bit; I am getting funny looks and people are avoiding me as I cross the tarmac. However, there were a few other gems from George: “The minority is sometimes right, the majority always wrong.” “It is the mark of a truly intelligent person to be moved by statistics.” With the latter in mind, I placed a request on the aus-soaring discussion group for CFIs to provide some data on their club’s last three solo pilots. It was information that could be obtained from club records or a quick study of the pilot’s log book: • Club (not for publication) • Student, designate by number only • Aerotow or winch • Number of launches to solo • Typical launch cost. • Hours flown pre-solo • Hourly cost of glider hire • Age of student • Gender I specifically targeted the pre-solo training phase where the launch component of costs is very significant. Solo club pilots have longer flight times so glider hire costs are more significant. Launch costs for private owners are a small component of their total costs; insurance and opportunity costs of capital invested in the glider are major factors. The response was underwhelming; you would think I was asking for the crown jewels! However, with the responses obtained and some further badgering of contacts by email and telephone, a sample of

January 2011

data was obtained sufficient to indicate some trends. I could have been more specific and requested costs on the basis of current charges. Some people went to consider-

able effort to provide actual costs which, particularly for aerotow costs, varied over the duration of the pilot’s training.

Soaring Australia 39


Soaring Calendar AUSTRALIA VGA Annual Rally 1 to 9 January 2011 Bordertown-Keith Gliding Club. It just keeps getting better! Contact Ian Patching <patching@westnet. com.au>. See websites [www.vintageglidersaustralia. org.au] and [www.brookmanonline.com].

F orbes Flatlands HG Championship 2 January 2011 to 12 January 2011 Two separate competitions: The main Open Class comp and a Sports Class comp to be held beforehand. The focus is an introduction to comp flying, with in-depth weather and task briefing each morning. Gerolf Heinrichs will be Meet Director, chair the morning briefing and also fly the task. In the evening we’ll have social/BBQ/meal and de-brief of the day’s flights. Entry or tow fees have not been finalised yet. It depends on the budget I can put together and how many pilots are interested. Please register your interest at [www.moyes.com.au/Forbes2011]. Contact: Vicki Cain, Moyes Delta Gliders, ph: 02 9316 4644, [www.moyes.com.au].

WAGA State Gliding Championship 4 to 14 January 2011 Hosted by the Beverley Soaring Society over 11 days. Two practice days, Tuesday 4 and Wednesday 5 Jan; nine competition days, Thursday 6 to Friday 14 Jan. Further information from Competition Director Owen Jones at <joneso@iinet.net.au>.

Bogong Cup 2011 16 to 22 January 2011 Mt Beauty, VIC. Registration: 15 January. Entry fee: $120. We’ll be running two HG comps this season: a Grand Prix and an Assigned Area Task event. Each comp will be limited to 20 pilots. Full details at [www.sacra.biz/bogong]. Contact Wesley Hill on 0408 305943 or <wes.hill@yahoo.com.au>.

Corowa Classic 2011 21 to 29 January 2011 20m seat Grand Prix style competition, hosted by Australian Soaring Centre Corowa and Corowa City Shire. A friendly competition designed to introduce competitors to grand prix racing and an opportunity to learn from the some of Europe’s best pilots. Entry fee $300 by 21 November 2010, late fee $350. Further information via [www.australian-soaring-corowa. com/], email <f.bruinsma@mikefox.nl> or Peter Summersby 0413 028737 <pjsum@bigpond.com>.

Women in Gliding Week 23 to 29 January 2011 Benalla, VIC. Contacts: Louise (LLU) <louise@asw19. com>, ph: 0448 625022, 03 93299329 (outside office hours please) or Rhonda, GCV Office Manager, during office hours <gliding@benalla.net.au>, ph: 03 57621058 (please leave message if not answered).

Manilla XC Camp 2011 24 January to 3 February 2011 Mt Borah, NSW. Free event for XC pilots of all classes instead of XC Open event this year. The 11-day XC Camp will provide online scoring and some day and final prizes in various categories. The event will attract many international and local pilots seeking points for the worldwide OLC XC contest and provide an excellent opportunity for new XC pilots to watch and learn. Come for as many days as you like, share the skies and stories as you fly for distance each day. Designed to bring out a pilot’s PB. Full day briefings by Godfrey Wenness, camp fire discussion, live music and alternate activities. Camping or 40 Soaring Australia

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

cabins at Mt Borah offer great value and now there is a swimming pool. Borah Basher service will run as always. Two retrieve buses are available for those without teams. Contact Godfrey: <skygodfrey@aol. com> or see the website [www.xcopen.org].

Horsham Week 2011 5 to 12 February 2011 Horsham aerodrome, VIC. Entries are rolling in, maximum of 40 gliders, fee only $100. Visit the event page [www.horshamweek.org.au] for official entry form, turnpoints and competition local rules. Flarm is mandatory. Note: To ensure your place, email the competition director well beforehand indicating your intention to attend. Contact: David Cleland 03 93333638, 0417 766208 or <cd@horshamweek.org. au>. The competition will be preceded by the VSA Cross-Country Coaching Week featuring seminars, pre-flight briefings and post-flight analyses and will now include two streams for novice cross-country and advanced soaring pilots. Coaching contacts: Ian Grant 03 98771463, 0418 271767 or <ian. grant.gliding@gmail.com> and David Wilson 0407 825706 or <dwjcra@ozemail.com.au>.

2011 Bright Paragliding Open 5 to 12 February 2011 The 2011 Open aims to focus on pilot development and encourage new/intermediate pilots to improve their flying through learning from the most experienced pilots in Australia. Daily lectures from Brian Webb, Craig Collings, Andrew Horchner and others on flying safely and with greater confidence; a mentoring program pilots can sign up for; a general focus to assist int pilots to get the most they can from each flying day. Competition structure: two separate tasks each day, one AAA and one Serial task. The AAA task will be set at the highest level for maximum ladder points, the Serial task will be shorter, more easily achieved to improve skills, get to goal or simply have fun. At registration, pilots must choose between Serial or AAA task as each will be scored separately and trophies awarded according to each task. Both comps launch together and tasks will be set in the same general area so pilots from both groups will be flying together. Register at [www.brightopen. org]. Enquiries to <brightopen@gmail.com>.

Lake Keepit Regatta 20 to 26 February 2011 Maximum of 30 gliders, on a first come basis; limited on-site accommodation available. Entry fee of $100 per aircraft. Further details [www. keepitsoaring.com], <comps@keepitsoaring.com> or phone Tim Carr on 0414 405544.

Ozone Corryong Open & Australian Nationals 26 February to 5 March 2011 Corryong, VIC. CAT2/AAA sanction. Organiser: Peter Bowyer 0412 486114 or <fly@corryongopen.com. au>. Website: [www.corryongopen.com.au].

Wylie Classic 27 February to 5 March 2011 A fun cross-country competition for pilots of all ratings held at Wyalkatchem in Western Australia. Practice day and registration on Saturday 26 February. Enquiries to Richard Breyley 0417 986896, <richard.breyley@matsa.com.au>. Web: [www. goldfieldsdustdevils.com/2011-wa-comps.html].

Victorian State Gliding Competition

Women With Wings II 7 to 11 March 2011 Bright, VIC. A fun, inspiring skills clinic for Aussie women HG and PG pilots of all experience levels, registration on the evening of Sunday 6th. Mentors include Brian Webb, Andrew Horchner, Tove Heaney, Craig Collings, Tony Barton and Olli Bathemeles. Flying in the Ovens and Kiewa Valleys. Cost: $95 earlybird registration; $120 late. Information, payments and registration [http://womenwithwings clinic.blogspot.com/] or contact Helen McKerral on <hmckerral@adam.com.au> or 0427 656545.

Australian Qualifying Grand Prix 20 to 26 March 2011 Boonah, QLD. Further details at [www.glidinggrand prix2010.com.au].

2010 NSW State Gliding Championships Rescheduled: 26 March to 2 April 2011 Lake Keepit Soaring Club, NSW. All classes including Club Class. For further information see [www. keepitsoaring.com].

GQ Easter Competition 2011 16 to 23 April 2011 Hosted by the Caboolture Gliding Club at Dalby, this traditional event caters for Sports and Club Class entries in a friendly comp for pilots at all levels. Entry fee is $250 until March 16, then $300 for late starters. Details, including expressions of interest and entry forms, at [www.glidingcaboolture.org.au/ Easter11].

Paragliding State of Origin Easter, 22 to 24 April 2011 Mt Borah, NSW. A great way to get into comp and XC flying in a fun and safe way. The comp is based on flying five pilot teams: one adv, two nov pilots and two other pilots, so get your crew together. Handicapping is used for scoring. C-grade (pending). Reserve, UHF radio and at least three hours XC are required. XC course recommended. Comp fee $20. Register at Oz Comps. Contact: James Thompson on 02 49468680 or <jamesflys@gmail.com>, [www. hunterskysailors.org.au/soo] for info and pilot pack.

NZ vs Australia PPG Championship

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The Flylight Dragonfly: Towards A Balanced Investment Portfolio Bill Runciman

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or me, watching the YouTube videos of the Dragonfly floating through the air (google ‘flylight dragonfly’) was love at first sight. Larry Jones (CFI of the Southern Districts Flying Club based at Strathalbyn, near Adelaide), an avid observer of innovations in flexwing flying, had a place in the Dragonfly queue, which he offered to me. We both made a pilgrimage to Sywell to witness this most delicate of creatures being brought into the world. Soon, the 14th Dragonfly produced was in Australia, ready to take to the air. Any doubts about the wisdom of having a second flexwing microlight were dispelled in no time at all. After a sedate take-off run, with its very civilised exhaust note burbling away, we appeared to levitate into the air, and from then on it was all simply wonderful flying. All who have flown the Dragonfly agree it has an amazing ‘grin factor’. It is light, responsive and predictable. There is a sensation of being blown around a bit in turbulence, rather than the disconcerting bumps and lurches characteristic of heavier, faster machines. The aircraft itself weighs only about 50kg (with another 35kg added by the wing) and in smooth conditions you need

no more than one finger to fly it – indeed it seems to fly itself. Most people have to ‘go around’ after the first attempt to land, as it simply glides and glides with a remarkably low sink rate. Any downsides? We had some fuel flow problems early on, which in the end were easily fixed. If you retract the undercarriage, it is best to lower it before landing – although it does slide along on its belly in quite a civilised way, with just a few scratches. It induces an enormous temptation to fly fairly low when there are no obstacles, so that you can look into the eyes of domestic animals and marine creatures whilst cruising along at a sedate 30kt. All in all, I believe that the Dragonfly is a fine investment. In fact, I am surprised that there is not a Dragonfly portfolio

Photo: Larry Jones

available in the average superannuation package, notwithstanding the fact that it devours two litres of fuel for every hour of flying, unless you catch a few thermals. Financial advisers who wish to follow up on this ethical and environmentally sensitive investment for their clients can contact me at <wrunciman@bigpond.com>.

Easter, 22 to 25 April 2011 This comp alternates yearly between Australia and NZ. Trophies: Best NZ and Best Australian Pilot. The winning country takes home the Anzac trophy. The comp will also serve as the National Championships for each country. Information: [www.ppgaustralia. com/AussieVKiwi/Aust_V_NZ_PPG.htm]. Only members of the NZHGPA & HGFA/PICO may compete in sanctioned events. Tasks: foot drag, cloverleaf, slow/ fast, take-off, power off landing, power on touch & go landing, kite war, bomb drop, ball scoop & drop, beam walk, efficiency, economy race. Contact: Brett Coupland 0409 162616.

O v erseas International events can be found at [http://events.fai.org/].

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6 to 13 March 2011

Find out more details by visiting the AIRSPORT TEAM 5 Pty Ltd website www.airsport-team5.com.au or email <info@airsport-team5.com.au>

Ararat Airfield, VIC. Maximum 40 entries. Further information in a future Soaring Australia and on the VSA website [home.vicnet.net.au/~vicsoari/events/ events.htm]. Contact Maurice Little on 03 93510964. January 2011

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Soaring Australia 41


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SMS Implementation – Emergency Response Plans (ERPs)

secured area. They may shoot footage from public areas, even though they may be shooting incident/accident footage. Only authorised personnel should make media comment, as determined by the club/event ERP.

Eric Novak

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obody heads off to a day’s flying expecting an emergency situation to unfold, and some may rarely, if ever, think about what to do if one does. An Emergency Response Plan (ERP) provides a logical approach to handling an emergency. To minimise the initial confusion that will inevitably follow an aircraft incident/accident, key personnel must be familiar with the Emergency Response Plan. The first time an ERP is read, should not be during an emergency. Hopefully none of us have to initiate actions under an ERP, but if an emergency situation does occur, we must be prepared to manage the situation effectively. The two main types of emergency situations that may be encountered are an accident or a missing aircraft.

GLIDING FEDERATION OF AUSTRALIA INC Airworthiness Inspection

FORM 2 and C of A Notice ■ A Form 2 inspection is due. $165* payment is enclosed

■ The C of A requires renewal. $42* payment is enclosed and the existing C of A document is returned

■ Initial registration package is required. $400* payment is enclosed * Fees include GST

A brief overview of the key elements contained in an effective ERP is outlined below. These elements will be expanded upon and further explained as the GFA Safety Management System (SMS) implementation continues.

F lo w c h a rt Flowcharts are a simple and effective way of summarising the critical initial steps that need to be undertaken in the event of an emergency, including those authorities and key people that need to be contacted quickly. This flowchart should be displayed in a prominent location wherever gliding operations are undertaken.

Checklist A basic checklist outlining other necessary actions that must occur should be developed, including check boxes that can be ticked off as the actions are completed. Examples of actions include appointing a Site Incident Controller, securing the aircraft involved and/or accident site, quarantine of documentation, recall of other aircraft and identification and management of witnesses.

Payment method:

■ Cheque

■ Credit Card ■ Direct Deposit For internet payments, deposit into: BSB: 013-442 Account No: 304729562

A) Documentation request ■ ■

lease send me a transfer of ownership document P Please send me a change of registered operator document

Aircraft Type................................................................................ Registration marks VH – ............................................................ Address to which documents are to be sent is: Name .......................................................................................... Address . ..................................................................................... ..................................................................................................... State.......................................................Postcode....................... Forward to: GFA Airworthiness Secretary, Level 1/34 Somerton Road, Somerton VIC 3062. Email: <Airworthiness@sec.gfa.org.au> Fax: 03 9303 7960

42 Soaring Australia

Initial Control Control of the emergency response needs to be established quickly. Depending on the nature of the incident, initial control will generally be assumed by the CFI or duty instructor until the arrival of the police force or other relevant emergency service such as the fire brigade. Ongoing command and control will again depend on the nature of the incident and may involve the police force, State Coroner, ATSB, GFA or CASA. The gliding club or gliding event Incident Site Controller would generally continue to act as a liaison should site control be assumed by another entity.

P r e s e r vat i o n of Evidence Preservation of evidence is critical and it is every member’s duty to preserve crash site evidence during the response and recovery phases. If evidence is not preserved, the root cause/s of the incident may not be established and opportunities to learn from the incident may be lost, amongst other consequences.

H a n d l i n g o f Ai r c r e w a n d K e y Wi t n e s s e s Eyewitnesses are extremely important in helping determine the factors that contributed to the incident/accident. Witnesses need to be identified and managed to ensure their recollections are not tainted by reflection, rumour or exposure to other witnesses or the media. Witness details and statements should be documented as soon as possible.

E n v i r o n m e n ta l H e a l t h C o n s i d e r at i o n s Besides the preservation of evidence, another reason for restricted access to the site is the potential presence of dangerous materials or equipment such as fuel, oxygen or composite materials. Considerations include ensuring a single point of entry to the site and approaching the site from upwind.

R e c o v e r y a n d S a lva g e of Aircraft or Wreckage This will be determined based on the nature of the incident. All or part of the wreckage may be needed by an authority such as the ATSB for off-site investigation, in which case investigators will work with the owner, probably through the insurer to arrange recovery. If no further investigation is required, the investigator in charge of the investigation will advise the owner that control over the aircraft or wreckage is no longer required and that the owner can begin salvage and/or clean up.

S u p p ort i ng F or m s There are several forms that should be utilised to help document the information

Log Keeping The accurate recording of information and actions taken are paramount in an emergency situation. Besides the ability to learn from and subsequently improve responses in the event of an emergency, the information may be required for follow-up investigations by the ATSB, and if the emergency involves loss of life, the Coroner’s court.

associated with an emergency response. These include: • Occurrence/accident report • Log of events • Witness statements The GFA will make available an ERP template that can be adopted by clubs who have not yet developed one. Clubs who already have one can cross check theirs against this template and make changes if required, or they can choose to adopt the template. Any ERP needs to be tested periodically with a controlled simulated exercise. ERPs should be in place for normal operations as well as organised events such as competitions and cadet activities. Copies of the ERP and supporting documents should be kept in an easily accessible location where gliding operations are undertaken. All members should be made aware of the location and content of the ERP, particularly those who may be required to carry out actions under the ERP. Remember, the first time an ERP is read should not be during an emergency. ERPs need to be tested periodically with a controlled simulated exercise. Thank you to the Australian Air Force Cadets (AAFC) staff of 327 (Gliding) Flight for sharing their knowledge and experience in this area, including providing a copy of their ERP. If you wish to provide any feedback relating to ERPs or any other safety related matter, please email <smsfeedback@sec.gfa.org.au>.

Cartoons by Codez

Security Site security is important for both personal safety and investigation integrity. Only those people authorised to access the site by the Incident Site Controller (police, fire brigade, ATSB, club CFI) are to be permitted entry to the site and all entry/exit details must be recorded.

Media The media have a job to do and have the right of access to certain information to do that job. If the media arrives before the police or other authority, for their own safety they must remain outside the January 2011

January 2011

Soaring Australia 43


Contact Addresses Southern Cross Gliding Club PO Box 132, Camden NSW 2570, 02 46558882, 0417 705997 (emergency). Southern Tablelands Gliding Club 57 Munro Rd, Queanbeyan NSW 2620, 02 62973504. South West Slope Soaring P/L 181 Fishers La, Bendick Murrell NSW 2803, 0488 531216. Sydney Gliding Incorporated PO Box 633, Camden NSW 2570, 0412 145144. Temora Gliding Club PO Box 206, Temora NSW 2666, 02 69772733.

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Australian Gliding Museum 2 Bicton St, Mt Waverley VIC 3149, 03 98021098. Gliding Queensland C/- Treasurer, 67 Glenora St, Wynnum QLD 4178, 07 38348311, 0417 762621. NSW Gliding Association The Secretary, 44 Yanko Ave, Wentworth Falls NSW 2782, 02 68892733, 02 68891250, Trs: 0407 459581. South Australian Gliding Association PO Box 65, Millicent SA 5280, 08 8733421, 0427 977218. Victorian Soaring Association 4/139 Roberts St, Essendon VIC 3040, 03 83835340, 03 93355364. Vintage Gliders Australia 22 Eyre St, Balwyn VIC 3103, 03 98175362. WA Gliding Association Inc. 59 Wellington Pde, Yokine WA 6060, 08 93282511, 08 94449505. NSW Gliding Association (NSWGA) 327 (Gliding) Flight, Australia C/- R Sheehan, 176 Macquarie Grove Rd, Camden NSW 2570, 0427 977127, 02 46553171. Bathurst Soaring Club PO Box 1682, Bathurst NSW 2795, 02 63371180 (weekend), 0427 470001. Byron Gliding Club Incorporated PO Box 815, Byron Bay NSW 2481, 02 66847627. Canberra Gliding Club GPO Box 1130, Canberra ACT 2601, 02 64523994, 0428 523994. Central Coast Soaring Club PO Box 1323, Gosford South NSW 2250, 02 43639111, 02 43844074, 0412 844074. Cudgegong Soaring Pty Ltd C/- Matthews Folbigg, Level 7, 10-4 Smith St, Parramatta NSW 2150, 02 96357966, 02 96357966. Grafton Gliding Club 16 Fuller St, Mullaway NSW 2456, 02 66541638, 0403 088551. Hunter Valley Gliding Club Co-op Ltd PO Box 794, Singleton NSW 2330. Lake Keepit Soaring Club 234 Keepit Dam Rd, Lake Keepit NSW 2340, 02 67697514. Leeton Gliding Club PO Box 607, Leeton NSW 2705, 02 69533825. Narromine Gliding Club Inc. PO Box 240, Narromine NSW 2821, 02 68892733, 0418 270182. Orana Soaring Club Inc. PO Box 240, Narromine NSW 2821, 02 68897373, 0418 270182. RAAF Richmond Gliding Club RAAF Base, Richmond NSW 2755, 02 45873214. RAAF Williamtown Gliding Club C/O Mr G R Lee, 10 Federation Dr, Medowie NSW 2318, 02 49829334. Scout Association NSW Gliding C/- Bob G Balfour, 80 Malvern St, Panania NSW 2213, 02 96951100. Soar Narromine Pty Ltd PO Box 56, Narromine NSW 2821, 02 68891856, 0419 992396.

Gliding Queensland 2 Wing AAFC School of Aviation Inc. 201 Squadron Air Force Cadets, PO Box 647 Archerfield QLD 4108, 07 38791980, 0415 150965. Barambah District Gliding Club 2 Yellow Gully Rd, Wolvi QLD 4570, 07 54867247, 0412 719797. Boonah Gliding Club Incorporated 164 Depot Rd, Boonah QLD 4310, 07 54632630, 0408 016164. Bundaberg Gliding Incorporated PO Box 211, Bundaberg QLD 4670, 07 41579558, 0417 071157. Caboolture Gliding Club PO Box 920, Caboolture QLD 4510, 0418 713903. Central Queensland Gliding Club PO Box 953, Rockhampton QLD 4700, 07 49331178. Darling Downs Soaring Club Level 1, 1 Swann Rd, Taringa QLD 4068, 07 46637140, 0409 507847. Gympie Gliding Club PO Box 722, Cooroy QLD 4563, 07 54835380. Kingaroy Soaring Club PO Box 91, Kingaroy QLD 4610, 07 41622191, 0438 179163. Moura Gliding Club PO Box 92, Moura QLD 4718, 07 49973265, 0428 360144. North Queensland Soaring Centre PO Box 3835, Hermit Park QLD 4812. Pacific Soaring PO Box 259, Caboolture QLD 4510, 07 54994997, 07 54994805. Southern Downs Aero & Soaring PO Box 144, Warwick QLD 4370, 07 38348311. SA Gliding Association (SAGA) Adelaide Soaring Club Inc. PO Box 94, Gawler SA 5118, 08 85221877. Adelaide Uni Gliding Club Incorporated Adelaide Uni Sports Assoc, The University of Adelaide SA 5005, 08 88262203, 0412 870963. Air Cadet Gliding Club PO Box 2000, Salisbury SA 5108, 08 83805137, 0429 805137. Alice Springs Gliding Club PO Box 356, Alice Springs NT 0871, 08 89526384, 0417 530345. Australian Junior Gliding Club 67A Balfour St, Nailsworth SA 5083, 0417 421650. Balaklava Gliding Club PO Box 257, Balaklava SA 5461, 08 88645062.

G F A Me m ber­ship F ees 2 0 1 0 - 2 0 1 1 Membership: NSW Victoria South Australia Queensland Western Australia

Normal $225 $230 $232 $230 $230

Student membership: Full NSW $136 Victoria $141 South Australia $143 Queensland $141 Western Australia $141

44 Soaring Australia

Family $183 $188 $190 $188 $188 Family $94 $99 $101 $99 $99

Short-term membership: 1 Month* 3 Month* Queensland/Victoria $62 $79 New South Wales $67 $84 South Australia $74 $91 Western Australia $72 $89 *Note: Once only purchase to Australian residents, thereafter 12 months membership to be purchased. International postage for Soaring Australia to be added to membership fees: Zone Country 1 New Zealand 2 Singapore 3 Japan, Hong Kong, India 4 USA, Canada, Middle East 5 UK, Europe, South America, South Africa

Price $51 $51 $51 $74 $74

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Barossa Valley Gliding Club PO Box 123, Stonefield via Truro SA 5356, 08 85640240, 0488 841373. Bordertown Keith Gliding Club PO Box 377, Bordertown SA 5268, 08 87521321, 0409 693027. Millicent Gliding Club PO Box 194, Millicent SA 5280, 08 87333421, 0427 977218. Murray Bridge Gliding Club PO Box 1509, Victor Harbor SA 5211, 08 85543543, 0409 677677. Northern Australian Gliding Club PO Box 38889, Winnellie NT 0821, 08 89412512. Renmark Gliding Club PO Box 450, Renmark SA 5341, 08 85951422, 0417 890215. Scout Gliding Club 22 Burford Crescent, Redwood Park SA 5097, 08 82895085, 0418 815618. Waikerie Gliding Club PO Box 320, Waikerie SA 5330, 08 85412644. Whyalla Gliding Club PO Box 556, Whyalla SA 5600, 08 86452619, 0413 127825. Victorian Soaring Association (VSA) Albury Corowa Gliding Club PO Box 620, Wodonga VIC 3689. Beaufort Gliding Club 41 Ruby St, Essendon VIC 3040, 0431 702175. Bendigo Gliding Club PO Box 846, Bendigo VIC 3550, 03 54423459. Bothwell Gliding Club PO Box 288, Sandy Bay TAS 7005, 03 62267615. Corangamite Soaring Club Kurweeton, Kurweeton Rd, Derrinallum VIC 3325, 03 55939277. Geelong Gliding Club PO Box 197, Bacchus Marsh VIC 3340, 03 93385925, 0409 212527. Gliding Club Of Victoria PO Box 46, Benalla VIC 3671, 03 57621058, 0429 950580. Grampians Soaring Club PO Box 468, Ararat VIC 3377, 03 53525710, 0417 514438. Horsham Flying Club PO Box 158, Horsham VIC 3402, 03 53823491, 0427 315845. Latrobe Valley Gliding Club PO Box 625, Morwell VIC 3840, 03 51221081, 0407 839238. Mangalore Gliding Club PO Box 208 Nagambie VIC 3608, 03 57985512, 0428 635717. Melbourne Motor Gliding Club PO Box 278, Dingley Village VIC 3172, 0418 511557. Mount Beauty Gliding Club Box 486, Mt Beauty VIC 3699, 02 60591417, 0402 075131. Murray Valley Soaring Club Ltd PO Box 403, Corowa NSW 2646, 02 60335036, 0400 244578. Soaring Club Of Tasmania 34 Clinton Rd, Geilston Bay TAS 7015, 03 62437508. South Gippsland Gliding Club PO Box 475, Leongatha VIC 3953, 0437 454986. Southern Riverina Gliding Club PO Box 32, Tocumwal, NSW 2714, 03 58743052, 03 58742914. SportAviation Pty Ltd Gate 10, Babingtons Rd, Tocumwal Airport, Tocumwal NSW 2714, 03 58742734, 0427 534122. Sunraysia Gliding Club PO Box 647, Mildura VIC 3500, 03 50257335, 0448 293927. Swan Hill Gliding Club PO Box 160, Nyah VIC 3594, 03 50376688. Tumbarumba Gliding Club C/- Judds Engineering P/L, PO Box 5283, Wagga NSW 2650, 02 69251642, 0428 251642. VMFG GPO Box 1096, Melbourne VIC 3001, 0402 281928 or 03 98486473 (h).

Wagga Wagga Soaring Club Inc. PO Box 613, Wagga Marketplace, Wagga Wagga NSW 2650, 0427 205624. WA Gliding Association (WAGA) 716 Flight Australia Air Force Cadets 7 Wing HQ, RAAF Base Pearce Bullsbrook WA 6084, 08 95717800. Beverley Soaring Society PO Box 136, Beverley WA 6304, 08 94595719, 0437 377744. Gliding Club of Western Australia PO Box 6231, East Perth WA 6892, 08 92212164, 0417 992806 (weekends). Morawa Gliding Club PO Box 276, Morawa WA 6623, 08 99723022. Narrogin Gliding Club PO Box 232, Narrogin WA 6312, 08 98811795 (weekends), 0407 088314. Stirlings Gliding Club C/- Peter Hardy-Atkins, 8 Parker St, Lockyer, Albany WA 6330, 08 98428816, 0408 842616.

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All correspondence, including changes of address, mem­bership renewals, short term memberships, rating forms and other administrative matters should be sent to: HGFA National Office 4a-60 Keilor Park Drive, Keilor Park VIC 3042, ph: 03 93367155, fax: 03 93367177, <office@hgfa.asn.au>, [www.hgfa.asn.au]. HGFA Operations Manager Interim: John Twomey 0419 357195 <Treasurer@hgfa.asn.au>, 108 Osborne St, Williamtown VIC 3016. Information about site ratings, sites and other local matters, contact the appro­pri­ate State asso­ciations, region or club. Board Members 2008 to 2010 Pres: Alex Jones 08 97344531 <President @hgfa.asn.au>, 34 McAvoy Rd, Allanson WA 6225. V-Pres: Rob Woodward 0408 808436 <Vice.President@hgfa.asn.au>, 38 Addison Rd, Black Forest SA 5035. Sec: Martin Halford 0434 427500 <Secretary@hgfa.asn.au>. Board Members: Chris Drake 0466 005967 <chris.drake@ hgfa.asn.au>, PO Box 988, Noosa QLD 4567. Benn Kovco Greg Lowry Lee Patterson Brian Webb States, Regions & Special Interest Groups ACTHPA LPO Box 8339, ANU, Acton ACT 0200; [www.acthpa.org]. Pres: Matthew Smith <matt.taet@gmail.com> 0402 905554; V-Pres: Nic Welbourn <nic@corinbank. com> 0422 783763; Trs: Kristina Smith <kdsmith71@gmail.com> 0407 905554; Sec: Nic Siefken <Nicolas.Siefken@ausport. gov.au> 0418 421683; Committee: Miguel Cruz <pyro_gest@hotmail.com> 0432 987819, Andrew Luton <andrewluton@ hotmail.com> 0404 254922; Public Officer: Barry Oliver <Barry.Oliver@anu.edu.au> 0407 825819; Meetings: 1st Thu/month 7.30pm Yamba Sports Club. Hang Gliding Association of WA Inc. PO Box 146, Midland, WA 6936 <hgawa@hgfa.asn.au>. Pres: Peter South <ronwaysouth@yahoo.com.au>; V-Pres: Alex Jones <aa.jones@bigpond.net.au>; Trs: Greg Lowry <g.lowry@iinet.net.au>; Sec: Mirek Generowicz <mgenerow@ optusnet.com.au>; Trs: Colin Brown 0407 700378, <cobrown@bigpond.com>. NSW HG and PG Association PO Box 3106, Bateau Bay NSW 2261, [www.nswhpa.org]. Pres: Bruce Wynne 0417 467695, <bwynne@bigpond.net.au>; V-Pres: Nir Eshed 0423 422494, <vice-presi dent@nswhpa.org>; Sec: Paul Cox 0421 072897, <coxy@ccparagliding.com.au>; Trs: Graeme Cran 0414 668424, <gicran@ gmail.com>.

January 2011

North Queensland HG Association PO Box 608, Kuranda QLD 4881. Pres: Bob Hayes 0418 963796 <flying@cairnshangglidingclub. org>; V-Pres: Daniel Keech <dkeech1@hotmail. com>; Sec/Trs: Tracey Hayes, PO Box 608, Kuranda QLD 4881, 0418 963796 <info@ azurephotography.com>. Queensland HG Association Pres: Greg Hollands <greg.s.hollands@ transport.qld.gov.au>, PO Box 61, Canungra QLD 4275 07 38448566. South Australian HG/PG/ML Association SAHGA Inc, c/O PO Box 6260, Hallifax St, Adelaide SA. All email: <sahga.exec@gmail. com>. Pres: Stuart McClure 0428 100796; Sec/Trs: Rob Woodward 0408 808436. Tasmanian HG & PG Association [www.thpa.org.au]. Pres: Stephen Clark 0419 997550, <stephenmclark@iprimus.com.au>; V-Pres: Pete Steane 0407 887310, <psteane@ vtown.com.au>; Sec/Trs: Simon Allen 0438 086322, <simon.allen@csiro.au>. Northern TAS info: Richard Long (Burnie PG pilot), 0438 593998, <northern@thpa.net>. Victorian HG and PG Association PO Box 157, Northcote VIC 3070, [www.vhpa. org.au]. Pres: Phil Campbell 0438 428569 <campbell.p@giant.net.au>; Sec: Nick Abicare 0418 104506 <nick.abicare@gm.com>; Trs: Stephen Leake 0409 553401 <sleak75@ gmail.com>; SO: Kevin Grosser 0419 022225 <litespeedrs4@gmail.com>; Sites: Mark Pike 0408 801356 <mark.pike@baesystems. com>; Committee: Hugh Alexander 0417 355578 <hughbert.skypig@hotmail.com>, Jan Bennewitz 0423 139923 <Jan.Bennewitz@ gmail.com>, Tony Hughes 0417 379847 <thughes@gordontafe.edu.au>, Anthony Meechan 0407 163796 <meeks65@yahoo. com.au>. The Pico Club (National Paramotor Club) Pres: Brett Coupland 0409 162616; V-Pres: Rob Van Riswick 0428 290462; Sec: Grant Cassar 0416 269894 <grantcassar@iinet.net. au>, 59 Empress Terrace Bardon QLD 4065; Trs: Chris Drake 0414 505452. NEW SOUTH WALES Blue Mountains HG Club Inc. [www.bmhgc.org.au]. Pres: Kacper Jankowski <KJankowski@ccia.unsw.edu.au>; V-Pres: Gregor Forbes 0421 376680 <forbesy@virgin broadband.com.au>; Sec: Alexander Drew 0423 696677 <revant01@yahoo.com.au>; Trs: Allan Bush (HG SSO) <bethandallan@bigpond.com>, 0407 814524; Comps: Mark Stewart (PG SO) <artik_mark@yahoo.com.au>, 0421 596345, Comp: 2nd and last Sunday of each month. Meetings: Contact committee. Central Coast Sky Surfers PO Box 3106, Bateau Bay NSW 2261, [www. centralcoastskysurfers.com]. Pres: Glen McFarlane 0414 451050 <glenbuilt@bigpond.com>; V-Pres: Jeff Terry 0416 291545 <jeff@survival solutions.com.au>; Sec: Julie Terry 0411 567825, <julie@survivalsolutions.com.au>; Trs: Paul Cox 0417 355897, <coxy@ccparagliding.com.au>, SSOs: Paul Cox 0417 355897, Javier Alvarez 0418 116681. Meetings: 1st Thu/month, 7:30pm, Erina Leagues Club, Ilya Ave, Erina. Dusty Demons Hang Gliding Club 6 Miago Court, Ngunnawal, ACT 2913. Pres: Trent Brown 0427 557486, <Trent.Brown@ anu.edu.au>; Sec: Peter Dall 0428 813746, <peter.dall@casa.com.au>; Trs: Michael Porter 0415 920444; SSO: Peter Dall 0428 813746. Hunter Skysailors Paragliding Club Pres: Bob Lane 0422 744285, <boblane.55@ hotmail.com>; V-Pres: Brent Leggett 0408 826455, <brent@flashme.co.au>; Sec: Albert Hart 0421 647013, <albert.hart@bigpond. com>. Meetings: Last Tue/month, 7pm, Hexham Bowling Club. Illawarra Hang Gliding Club Inc. 27a Paterson Rd, Coalcliff NSW 2508. Pres: Frank Chetcuti 0418 252221 <chetcuti1@ bigpond.com>; Sec: John Parsons; SSO: Tim Causer 0418 433665 <timcau@ozemail.com.au>. Kosciusko Alpine Paragliding Club [www.homestead.com/kapc]; Pres: Michael Porter 0415 920444 <Michael.Porter@ap.jll. com>; V-Pres/SSO: James Ryrie 0417 491150 <James@Micalago.com>; Sec: Mark Elston 0428 480820 <elston.mark@gmail.com>.

January 2011

ALL CLUBS PLEASE CHECK DETAILS IN THIS SECTION CAREFULLY Could all Clubs please ensure they maintain the correct and current details of their Executive Committees and contacts here in the magazine. Specific attention is directed to the listing of SSOs and SOs for the Clubs. Please ALL CLUBS and nominated Senior SOs and SOs confirm ALL SSO and SO appointments with the HGFA Office <office@hgfa.asn.au> to ensure that those holding these appointments have it listed on the Membership Database and can receive notices and correspondence as required. Appointment of these officers is required to be endorsed by Clubs in writing on the appropriate forms. Sometime in the future if confirmation is not received, those listed in the Database where no current forms or confirmation is held, the appointment will be taken as having expired. General Manager, HGFA

Manilla SkySailors Club Inc. PO Box 1, Manilla NSW 2346, [www.mss. org.au]. Pres/SSO (PG): Godfrey Wenness 02 67856545, <skygodfrey@aol.com>, V-Pres: Matt Morton <Matt.Morton@defence.gov. au>, Sec: Suzi Smith <suzismith@hotmail.com>, Trs: Bob Smith <bobskisan@hotmail.com>, SSO (HG) Patrick Lenders 02 67783484 <patrick. lenders@gmail.com>, SSO (WM): Willi Ewig 02 67697771 <skyranch@gmx.net>. Mid North Coast HG and PG Club Pres: Nigel Lelean 0419 442597; SSO: Lee Scott 0429 844961. Newcastle Hang Gliding Club PO Box 64 Broadmeadow NSW 2292; [www. nhgc.asn.au]. Pres: Dawson Brown 0429 675475 <dawson@bmhgc.org.au>; V-Pres: Gary Herman 0401 772289 <garyherman@ aapt.net.au>; Sec: Don Bremner 0421 346997, <dmbremner@optusnet.com>; Trs: Allan McMillan 0400 637070 <adm@idl. com.au>; SOs: Coastal – Tony Barton 0412 607815, Inland – Scott Barrett 0425 847208, John O’Donohue 02 49549084, PG – James Thompson 02 49468680; News­letter: David Stafford 02 49215832 <editor@nhgc.asn.au>. Meetings: Last Wed/month 7:30pm South Newcastle RLC, Llewellyn St, Merewether. Northern Rivers HG and PG Club PO Box 126, Byron Bay NSW 2481; [www. nrghpgc.net]. Pres: Jan Smith 0438 876926 <jansmith.cloudnine@gmail.com>; V-Pres: Brian Rushton 0427 615950 <byronair@ optusnet.com.au>; Sec: Marco Veronesi 0405 151515 <lucky_mpv@yahoo.com.au>; Trs: Paul Gray 0407 738658 <mystralmagic@ gmail.com.au>; PR: Cedar Anderson 0429 070380 <cedaranderson@gmail.com>; Sites: Peter Wagner 0431 120942, Col Rushton 0428 751379 <colin.rushton@bigpond. com>; SSO (PG): Lindsay Wooten 0427 210993 <lindsaywootten@bigpond.com>; SSO (HG): Andrew Polidano 0428 666843 <andrew@ poliglide.com>. Meetings: 2nd Wed/month, 7pm, Byron Services Club. Stanwell Park HG and PG Club PO Box 258 Helensburgh NSW 2508; Pres: Chris Clements 0414 777853 <president@fly stanwell.com>; V-Pres: Tony Sandeberg 0413 593054 <vice-president@flystanwell.com>; Sec: Jorj Lowrey 0400 937234 <secretary@fly stanwell.com>; Trs: Peter Ffrench 0403 076149 <treasurer@flystanwell.com>; M/ship: Nir Eshed 0423 422494 <nir@flystanwell.com>; SSO: Mark Mitsos 0408 864083, <SSO@flystanwell.com>. Sydney Hang Gliding Club Pres: Dean Tooker <capebanks@unwired.com. au>; V-Pres: Brett O’Neil <bo307@westnet. com.au>; Trs: John Selby 02 93447932 <john selby@idx.com.au>; Sec: Bruce Wynne 0417 467695 <bwynne@bigpond.net.au> or <sydney hangglidingclub@y7mail.com>; Dev/Train: Owen Wormald 02 94667963 <owen_ wormald@nab.com.au>; SO: Bruce Wynne, Doug Sole; SSO: Ken Stothard. Meetings: 3rd Wed/month, 7:30pm Botany RSL, Botany. Sydney Paragliding & Hang Gliding Club PO Box 840, Mona Vale NSW 2103. Pres: Peter Rundle <sf27mz@gmail.com>; V-Pres: Brett Coupland 0409 162616, <nbf@whirlwind.com.au>; Sec: Kirsten Seeto 0405 887857 <k_seeto@hotmail.com>; Social Sec: Shanta Wallace 0416 938227 <shanta@ noworries-hg.com>; Committee: Graeme Cran <crannie@ccparagliding.com.au>, Sandy Thomson <sandythomson1@bigpond.com>, Jeff Woodhall <jeff@erratic-demon.co.uk>.

Canungra Hang Gliding Club Inc. PO Box 41, Canungra QLD 4275; [www.chgc. asn.au]. Pres: Phil McIntyre <president@ chgc.asn.au>; V-Pres: Lee Patterson <vicepresident@chgc.asn.au>; Sec: Mark Kropp <secretary@chgc.asn.au>; Trs: Brandon O’Donnell <treasurer@chgc.asn.au>; Ed: Cameron McNeill 0419 706326; Gen-Exec: Greg Hollands <gem@chgc.asn.au>; SSO PG:Phil Hystek 07 55434000 (h), 0418 155317 <sso @chgc.asn.au>; SSO HG: Lee Patterson 0417 025732 <sso@chgc.asn.au>. Central Queensland Skyriders Club Inc. ‘The Lagoons’ Comet River Rd, Comet QLD 4702. Pres: Alister Dixon (instructor) 0438 845119, <apdixon@bigpond.com>; Sec: James Lowe 0418 963315, <j.lowe@cqu. edu.au>; Trs: Adrienne Wall 07 49362699, <jaw12@bigpond.com>; Events: Jon Wall 0427 177237, <jonathon.a.wall@team. telstra.com>; SSO: Bob Pizzey 0439 740187, 07 49387607. Towing Biloela: Paul Barry 07 49922865, <prbarry@tpg.com.au>. Conondale Cross-Country Club [www.conondaleflyers.asn.au/] Pres: Denis Davis 0428 130375; V-Pres: Paul Underwood 0407 177793; Sec: Andrew Dobinson <andrewdobinson@gmail.com>; Trs: Steve Stocker 0411 226733. Dalby Hang Gliding Club 17 Mizzen St, Manly West QLD 4179. Pres: Daron ‘Boof’ Hodder 0431 240610, <daron@ aclad.com.au>; Sec/Trs: Annie Crerar 0418 711821, <annie.bruce@bigpond.com>; SSO: Jason ‘Yoda’ Reid 0424 293922, <jasonr@ gleda.com.au>. Fly Killarney Inc. Pres/SSO: Lindsay Wootten 0427 210993, <lindsaywootten@bigpond.com>; V-Pres: Alistair Gibb 0414 577232, <11thhour@iinet. net.au>; Sec/Trs: Sonya Fardell 0415 156256, <s.fardell@uq.edu.au>. Sunshine Coast Hang Gliding Club PO Box 227, Rainbow Beach QLD 4581; <intheair@ozemail.com.au>. Pres: Geoffrey Cole 0408 420808, 07 5455 4661; V-Pres & SSO (HG): David Cookman 0427 498753; V-Pres (PG): Tex Beck 0407 238017; Trs: Gary Allen 0417 756878; Sec: Chris Ferreira 0420 980572 <kcplans@hotmail.com>; (HG): David Cookman 0427 498573, 07 54498573; SSO (PG): Jean-Luc Lejaille 0418 754157, 07 54863048. Wicked Wings Club Pres: Peter Schwenderling 0427 461347 <swendo1@bigpond.net.au>; Trs: Craig Dunn <craigrdunn@y7mail.com>, Sec: Sonya Fardell 0415 156256, <s.fardell@uq.edu.au> Sonya Fardell, 260 Postman’s Ridge Rd, Helidon Spa QLD 4344. Whitsundays HG Club Sec/Trs: Ron Huxhagen 07 49552913, fax: 07 49555122, <sitework@bigpond.net.au>. Tasmania (see States & Regions)

NORTHERN TERRITORY Alice Springs HG and PG Club Pres: Ricky Jones 0406 098354, <redcentre paragliding@yahoo.com>, contact for paramotoring, PG ridge soaring and thermal flying. QUEENSLAND Caboolture Microlight Club 50 Oak Place, Mackenzie QLD 4156. Pres: Derek Tremain 07 33957563, <derekjo@gil. com.au>; Sec: John Cresswell 07 34203254, <crezzi@lineone.net>; SO: Graham Roberts 07 32676662, <trike@tpg.com.au> Cairns Hang Gliding Club PO Box 6468, Cairns QLD 4870. Pres: Bob Hayes 0438 710882 <rohayes@optusnet.com. au>; V-Pres/SO: Brett Collier 0431 151150 <brettcollier@bigpond.com>; Sec: Lance Keough, 31 Holm St, Atherton QLD 4883, 07 40912117; Trs: Nev Akers 07 40532586.

VICTORIA Dynasoarers Hang Gliding Club <dynasoarers@gmail.com>; Pres: Dale Appleton 0408 382635; SSO: Rob van der Klooster 0408 335559. Meetings: 1st Fri/month, venue see [www.dynasoarers.vhpa.org.au]. Melbourne Hang Gliding Club Inc. PO Box 5278, South Melbourne VIC 3205 [www.melbourne.vhpa.org.au]. Pres: Gabriel Toniolo 0407 544511, <gabriel.toniolo@ hotmail.com>; Sec: Scott Rawlings 0409 675408, <scottrawlings@ymail.com >; Trs: Noel Bear 0425 801813, <treasurer@mhgc. asn.au>; SSO: Peter Holloway 0408 526805, <info@freedomairsports.com.au>, Committee: Glen Bachelor & Peter Cass. Meetings: 3rd Wed/month, Tower Hotel, 686 Burwood Road, Hawthorn East VIC 3123. North East Victoria Hang Gliding Club Pres: John Chapman 0412 159472 <chappo 252@hotmail.com>; Sec: Bill Oates 0466 440 049 <secretary@nevhgc.net>; Trs/M/ship: Greg Javis 0407 047797; Committee: Barb

Scott 0408 844224, Bill Brooks 0409 411791; SSO: Karl Texler 0428 385144; Meetings: [www.nevhgc.net/]. Sky High Paragliding Club [www.skyhighparagliding.org]; Pres: Steve Leak <pres@skyhighparagliding.org.au>, 0409 553 401; V-Pres: Alister Johnson 0418 323692 <vp@ skyhighparagliding.org.au>; Trs: Phil Lyng 0421 135894 <tres@skyhighparagliding.org.au>; Sec: Frank Adler 0408 264615 <sec@skyhighparaglid ing.org.au>; M’ship: Loz Pozzani 0421 389839 <mem@skyhighparagliding.org.au>; Nov Rep: Mike Armstrong 0412 329442 <nov@skyhigh paragliding.org.au>; Web: Frank Adler 0408 264 615 <wm@skyhighparagliding.org.au>; Safety: Hamish Barker 0437 137893 <safety@skyhigh paragliding.org.au>; Committee: Dave Frecheville. Meetings: 1st Wed/month 8pm Retreat Hotel, 226 Nicholson St, Abbotsford. Southern Microlight Club [http://home.vicnet.net.au/~stclub/]. Pres: Mark Howard 0419 855850 <mark.howard@ auspost.com.au>; V-Pres: Ken Jelleff <kenj@ jelfor.com.au>; Sec/Ed: Kelvin Glare 0421 060706 <kalkat@optusnet.com.au>; Trs: Dean Marriott <dean@ultimate.net.au>. Meet­ings: 2nd Tue/month 8pm Manning­-ham Club, 1 Thompsons Rd, Bulleen. Western Victorian Hang GIiding Club PO Box 92, Beaufort VIC 3373, [www. wvhgc.org]. Pres: Anthony Meechan 0407 163796, <meeks65@yahoo.com.au>; V-Pres: Greg Beglehole 0419 889153, <greg@ heatingandcooling.com.au>; Sec: Zhenshi Van Der Klooster <zhenshi@thecourier.com. au>; Trs: Richard Carstairs 0409 066860, <rcarstairs@optushome.com.au>; SSO: Rohan Holtkamp 0408 678734 <rohan@ dynamicflight.com.au>. Meet­ings: Last Sat/ month, The Golden Age Hotel, Beaufort, 7pm. WESTERN AUSTRALIA Albany HG & PG Club SSO: Simon Shuttleworth 0427 950556; Sec: John Middleweek 08 98412096, fax: 08 98412096. Cloudbase Paragliding Club Inc. Secretary, 12 Hillside Crs, Maylands WA 6051. Pres: Mike Annear 0400 775173 <mike@ mikeannear.com>; V-Pres: Eric Metrot 0407 003059<tromes@bigpond.com>; Trs: Colin Brown 0407 700378 <cobrown@bigpond. com>; Committee: Shelly Heinrich 0428 935462 <shellheinrich@hotmail.com>, Rod Merigan 0439 967971 <rmerigan@q-net.net. au>, Clive Salvidge 0402 240038 <clive@iinet. net.au>, Julien Menager 0423 829346 <Julien. me@gmail.com>; SOs: John Carman, Nigel Sparg, Colin Brown, Mark Wild. Meetings: Last Tues/month, 7:30pm, Osborne Park Bowling Club, Park St, Tuart Hill. Goldfields Dust Devils Inc. [www.dustdevils.itaustralia.org]. Kalgoorlie: Pres: Toby Houldsworth <drogue@bigpond. com>, 0428 739956; Trs/SSO: Murray Wood <muzel71@bigpond.net.au>, 08 90215771; Sec/SO: Richard Breyley <richard.breyley@ matsa.com.au>, 0417 986896. Perth: SSO: Mark Stokoe <Mark.Stokoe@health.wa.gov. au>, 0414 932461. Hill Flyers Club Inc. <hillflyers@tpg.com.au>. Pres/SSO: Rick Williams 0427 057961; Sec/SSO: Gary Bennet 0412 611680; SSO: Gavin Nicholls 0417 690386, Mike Ipkendanz 08 92551397, Dave Longman 08 93859469. Meetings held on site during club fly-ins at York, Toodyay. Western Microlight Club Inc. Pres: Brian Watts 0407 552362; V-Pres: Keith Mell 08 97971269; Sec: Paul Coffey 0428 504285; CFI: Brendan Watts: 0408 949004. Western Soarers PO Box 483, Mt Hawthorn WA 6915; [www. westernsoarers.com]. Pres: Michael Duffy <lehanggliding@gmail.com>; V-Pres: Jason Kath <jkath@bigpond.net.au>; Sec: Cyril Eliopulos <wshgc@hgfa.asn.au>; Trs: Greg Lowry <g.lowry@iinet.net.au>; SSOs: Shaun Wallace, Gavin Nicholls, Matty Coull, Rick Williams, Michael Duffy. Meetings: See [http:// au.groups.yahoo.com/group/western_soarers/].

Soaring Australia 45


Classifieds

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G FA NOTICE TO ALL GFA ADVERTISERS All advertisements and payment can be sent to: The Gliding Federation of Australia Inc/Advertising Level 1/34 Somerton Road, Somerton VIC 3062. Ph: 03 9303 7805, Fax: 03 9303 7960 Email: <Advertising@sec.gfa.org.au> Advertisements may be emailed in high resolution (300dpi at 100% size) using TIF or EPS formats. Photo­graphs may be pro­vided in either photo print or slides. Low resolution digitals are not suitable. Photo­graphs, slides or disks may be returned. Please include a self-addressed and stamped envelope for the return of any promotional material. All GFA advertisements must be paid for prior to publication. (Payment by cheque, money order or credit card). Don’t forget Classifieds deadline is the 25th of the month, for publication five weeks hence. For current advertising fees, go to [www.gfa.org.au].

Single-seater Sailplanes ASW17 VH-YKL. Complete enclosed trailer & instruments now in Australia, $35000. Ph: Brad Edwards 0427 202535 or 02 67711733. ASW20BL VH-HDY, 15m & 16.6m configurations. 2650 hrs, 860 landings. Comp ready. Excellent trailer. Full tow-out gear. Many extras. Price negotiable. Ph: Gary 03 53524938, or <gstevo@dodo.com.au>. ASG29-18m 2006. Low hrs, fully equipped, Cobra trailer (alu top & floor), always hangared at Narromine, $135000 obo. Email: <HQM13606@nifty.com>. Cirrus 75 VH-GQT, 2550 hrs, 1220 landings. wing tip extensions, new canopy, good trailer, Form 2 completed Aug. $19000. Ph: Tony 07 46614090. Hornet GEY with winglets, basic instruments, B20, 720ch radio & u/c warning. Trailer & tow-out gear included. This aircraft has been professionally refinished & will be sold with a fresh Form 2 incl. 6000-hr inspection. Price $20000 ono. Ph: Bruce 0407 795412. HPH 304 Shark VH-GAG Built 2008. 18m Class competition glider, only 250 hrs, immaculate showroom condition, factory finished in polyurethane, Cobra trailer & tow-out gear. Great performer & current holder of several international glider records with longest flight of over 1200km. Current new price for this glider would be over $175000, excellent opportunity to buy Australian demo for $145000 to make way for Jet Shark in 2011. Ph: Andrew 0488 161844 or <georgo28@bigpond.com>. Jantar Std 2 VH-IZT 1850 hrs, 1100 landings. Good clean condition. Microair radio, Borgelt instrumentation, canopy hinge. Well thought-out trailer & all tow-out gear. Competitive Std Class performance, price negotiable. Ph: Paul 0404 851876. Libelle 201B serial number 454. 2900 hrs VH-GCJ, new canopy, new panel with Borgelt vario, LX20 GPS Logger, radio & Flarm. New water bags & c/w tow-out gear & a good trailer. Wing covers & fresh Form 2, $16000. Ph: 02 66243999. LS8-18/15 Fully equipped/optioned + Cobra XL. Priced btw $120-135000 depending on equipment. Ph: Miles Gore-Brown 07 55789904 or <mgbsia@ pacific.net.sg>. Pik 20B VH-GVF Good condition, winglets, fibreglass factory trailer, oxy, many Pik spares, recently completed Form 2 & ready for the soaring season with all tow-out gear. $23000. Integrated L-Nav is available (neg). T-hangar available at Bathurst if required (neg). Ph: Geoff 02 48614284, <gsweeney @tpg.com.au> or Andrew 0419 479392. Pilatus B4 Fresh Form 2 & 30 yearly, low hrs, retractable, Microair VHF, enclosed trailer $15000 ono. Ph: 0419 804248.

46 Soaring Australia

Std Cirrus GOX Excellent condition. New gelcoat, winglets, Flarm, Microair, radio, tow-out-gear, VG, enclosed trailer, $20000 ono. Ph: 03 97437605 or <aekreti@bigpond.net.au>.

Ventus 2c

General Due to fleet restructure the VMFG offers the following a/c for sale: Hornet GSA, encl. trailer, Xcom, Flarm. Prov. for W/L. LS-3a CQP, encl. trailer, Xcom, Flarm. Both a/c come with current F2 & recent major insp. Both in VG cond. Janus B GVU, damaged. Wide range of options incl. instr, radio, encl. trailer. Suit club/individuals with time & expertise to finish. Grob 109 B GUM, current F2, engine on condition. VG instrumentation. Realistic offers considered. Contact: Ian Patching, Hon. Sec. <patching@westnet.com.au>.

Gliding Publications

NZ registered s/n 76, 460 hrs, in immaculate condition, normal instruments plus SN10B & remote, trig TT21 Txdr, Dittel FSG71 comm, Flarm with Swiss bat display, tinted canopy, MH reg & steel oxy cylinder. As new Cobra trailer with carpet & SL features. Placed well in the NZ 18m Nats last year, $NZ156000 excl. NZ sales tax. Can take to Omarama or ship from Auckland. Ph: Ross at Sailplane Services +64 9 2947 324 mob +64 27 4789123.

Two-seater Sailplanes Duo Discus T VH-JSR best Duo in Australia, like new, beautifully finished, meticulously maintained, winglets, handles like a Duo X, low engine hrs, complete package with parachutes, instruments, oxygen, trailer. Ph: Shane 0418 759310, <mac53@ecn.net.au> or Ralph 07 30030817 (h), <rhenderson@iinet.net.au>. IS28 WVV (re-advertised). In very good condition with radio & standard instruments. 13300 hrs TT. Would suit aerotowing club. All offers considered. Ph: Robert 03 9489 4298 or <carey@ericorp.com.au>.

Self-Launching/Motor Gliders Grob Twin III 103 self-launcher. Very low hrs, refinished; delight to fly. $125000 fly away. $135000 with trailer tow away. Ph: Mark Rowe 0403 307363 or <justsoaring@gmail.com>. SF25 B Scheibe Jabiru 2200 Motor Falke VH-HNO, TT 2275 hrs, engine 215 before top overhaul, 32-litre tank plus 10-litre long range tank. Basic instruments, Microair radio, new tyres, spare prop, etc.187kg cockpit load. $38000. Ph: 03 95510965 or <info@melbourneglidingadventures.com.au>.

Silent TARGA Fuel Inject

Airborne Magazine: Covering all facets of Australian & New Zealand modelling. The best value modelling magazine. Now $60pa for six issues. Plans & other special books available. PO Box 30, Tullamarine, VIC 3043. Free Flight: Quarterly journal of the Soaring Asso­ ciation of Canada. A lively record of the Canadian soaring scene & relevant international news & articles. $US26 for one year, $47 for two years, $65 for three years. 107-1025 Richmond Rd Ottawa, Ontario K2B 8G8 Canada, email: <sac@sac.ca>. Gliding International: The new international gliding magazine edited by John Roake. Specialising in being first with news from every corner of the soaring globe. A$60 p.a. Personal cheques or credit cards accepted. Contact: Gliding International, 79 Fifth Avenue, Tauranga, New Zealand. Email: <office@glidinginternational.com>. Sailplane & Gliding: The only authoritative British magazine devoted entirely to gliding. 52 A4 pages of fascinating material & pictures with colour. Available from the British Gliding Asso­ci­ation, Kimberley House, Vaughan Way, Leicester, England. Annual subscription for six copies £17.50. Sailplane Builder: Monthly magazine of the Sail­ plane Homebuilders Association. $US29 (airmail $US46) to SHA, c/o Murry Rozansky, 23165 Smith Road, Chatsworth, CA 91311 USA. Soaring: Official monthly journal of the Soaring Society of America Inc. PO Box 2100, Hobbs,nm 88241 USA. Foreign subscription rates (annu­ally): $US43 surface delivery; $US68 premium delivery. Technical Soaring/OSTIV: Quarterly publi­ca­tionof SSA containing OSTIV & other technical papers. c/o T U Delft, Fac Aerospace engineering, Kluyerweg 1, NL-2629 HS DELFT, The Netherlands. Vintage Times: Official newsletter of Vintage Gliders Australia, edited by David & Jenne Goldsmith, PO Box 577, Gisborne VIC 3437, Mem­ber­ship $20 pa.

H G FA

[www.alisport.com] Highly optioned new demo unit, < 6 launches & test hrs for CofA only. One-man self-rig package (20 min), steerable tail wheel, super Cobra trailer. Pure fun & independence. Price neg. Ph: Greg 0400 114747 or <gregdoyle1@me.com>. Ventus cM self-launcher, 17.6, winglets, ~800 hrs TT, engine 5 hrs, Altair, Vega, Dittel, Flarm.Cobra. Refinished 2008. Fresh Form 2. Perfect, beautiful. Just fly it. $110000 (GST incl.) Ph: 02 66221666 or <info@spe.com.au>.

Instruments & Equipment LX7007 Pro IGC Flarm flight computer with rear seat repeater unit & two variometers. All at up to date status. $4000. Ph: Roger Druce 03 94398947, 0419 880495 or <rogdruce@optusnet.com.au>. LX 20 in near new condition. Flight logging & navigation display, $550. Ph: Roger Druce 03 94398947 or <rogdruce@optusnet/.com.au>.

Classifieds are free of charge to HGFA members up to a maximum of 40 words. One classified per person per issue will be accepted. Classifieds are to be delivered to the HGFA office for membership verification/payment by email <office@hgfa.asn.au>, fax: 03 93362177 or post: 4a/60 Keilor Park Drive, Keilor Park VIC 3042. The deadline is 25th of the month, for pub­li­cation five weeks hence. Submitted classifieds will run for one issue. For con­secutive publication, re-sub­mission of the classified must be made, no advance bookings. When submitting a classified remember to include your contact details (for prospective buyers), your HGFA membership number (for verifi­ca­tion) and the State under which you would like the classified placed. (Note that the above does not apply to com­mer­cial operators. Instructors may place multiple classified entries, but will be charged at usual advertising rates.)

requirements as contained in Section 9 of the Operations Manual & as provided by manufacturers. Secondhand equipment should always be inspected by an indepen­ dent person, an Instructor wherever possi­ble. Advice should be sought as to the con­di­tion, airworthiness & suitability of the aircraft. It should include examination of mainte­ nance logs for the aircraft. It is unethical & a legally volatile situation for individuals to provide aircraft which are unsuitable for the skill level of the pilot, or aircraft that are unairworthy in any way.

HGFA Schools VICTORIA

VICTORIA

PARAGLIDING CENTRE We are based in Bright, NE Victoria, widely renowned as Australia’s best flying region. Bright has been host to numerous Australian & international competitions. Feel confident that you are learning with the best, our CFI Fred Gungl (six times Australian Paragliding Champion) has been involved in paragliding since 1990 & instructing for over 10 years. Courses • Introductory & HGFA licence course • Thermal & XC clinics for all levels • SIV courses • Tow courses • XC tandem flights • Equipment Sales We are now conducting SIV courses. See website for details.

Hang Gliders & Equipment Moyes Extreme Harness (suit height 188cm) with front-mounted Roo chute, Bräuniger vario plus mounting bracket & Icom 40ch UHF radio with headset. All in very good condition with manuals. $2000. Ph: Danny 0400 805422.

General Kangook

The latest range of Kangook paramotors, Dudek Reflex paragliders, trikes, flight decks, spares & your reserve parachute equipment all on our website for your inspection with prices. Ph: Ben 0418 753220.

Dealer for all major glider manufacturers, Charly reserves, Insider helmets & various accessories.

Poliglide

Active Flight Fred Gungl, ph: 0428 854455 www.activeflight.com.au

Concertina Bag

PARA SUPPLY / Cocoon3 concertina bag, PARA SUPPLY / Cocoon3 concertina bag, PARA SUPPLY / Cocoon3 concertina bag, PARA SUPPLY / Cocoon3 concertina bag, www.parasupply.com Press To Talk Syste m

established 1988

PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, PARA SUPPLY / PTT sys, www.parasupply.com

Why come to North-east Victoria to learn with Eagle School? • A part from being fortunate enough to have the most consistently reliable weather for training in Australia… • Australia’s longest running Microlight school. • Our person centred approach means that we value feedback and individually tailor our training methods to suit the student’s needs. • We specialise in remedial training when you get stuck in your present learning environment. • We are interested in seeing you achieve your goals and make your dreams a reality. • You will receive ongoing support after your licence • We aim to shape you into a safe and confident pilot by encouraging you to challenge yourself in a safe and supportive environment. • If you are already a Hang Glider, Paraglider or Glider pilot you’ll learn for half price! We look forward to assisting you to master a new set of skills which will take you to new heights in every respect.

Call for HGFA Soaring Australia Contributions Written and cover photo contributions to YOUR magazine are dropping off again. Please send in any items you find worthy of sharing We all have had experiences and adventures worth sharing, no matter how many hours we have in the logbook, so get writing and send articles and a few pictures to your editor:

<soaring.australia@hgfa.asn.au>

NO PRESSURE SALES!!! BUY IN YOUR OWN TIME

Feel free to contact us, we are happy to chat with you. STEPHEN RUFFELS CFI Mail address: 16 Hargreaves Road, Bright, 3741 (03) 5750 1174 or (0428) 570 168 email <fly@eagleschool.com.au> Look up our website: [www.eagleschool.com.au] download our’Learn to Fly’ brochure for what’s involved, plus costs.

All aircraft should be suitable for the intend­ ed use; this includes the skill level required for the specific aircraft being reflective of the pilot’s actual rating & experience. All members must adhere to the mainte­nance January 2011

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January 2011

Soaring Australia 47


HGFA Schools Queensland

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • New south wales

New south wales

RAINBOW PARAGLIDING APCO AUSTRALIA Offering the full range of APCO equipment APCO Aviation three years/250 hours warranty for porosity. Gliders that are made to last unique in the industry. Customer service and 100% satisfaction guarantee. Test centre for APCO gliders [www.apcoaviation.com].

APCO Australia and PWC winner of the Serial Class 2000 Established since 1996, Rainbow Paragliding is based on the Sunshine Coast and Hinterland. The school has access to 25 sites and holds a permit to operate in the Cooloola National Park including Teewah and world famous Rain­ bow Beach. In the Sunshine State, we fly all year round, 60km cross-country flights have been achieved in winter! FULL LICENCE COURSE – Strictly only four stu­dents per instructor, for quality personalised tui­tion at your own pace, between eight to 10 days. REFRESHER COURSE – Groundhandling, top landing or asymmetric recovery techniques: Come learn with the experts. INTERMEDIATE, ADVANCED, TANDEM OR PARAMOTOR ENDORSEMENT – We have the sites, the weather and the knowledge. SALES AND SERVICES – New and second-hand, trade-in, maintenance and repairs. YOUR INSTRUCTORS: Jean-Luc Lejaille, CFI and senior safety officer, paramotor pioneer (first licence issue in Australia), over 2,500 student days’ experience, instructing since 1995.

Jean-Luc Lejaille CFI 45192 Rainbow Paragliding – APCO Australia PO BOX 227, Rainbow Beach 4581 Ph: 07 5486 3048 – 0418 754 157 Email: <info@paraglidingrainbow.com>

[www.paraglidingrainbow.com] New south wales

Professional Paragliding • • • • • •

Tandem Introductory Flights Paragliding Courses and Certifications Pilot Development Clinics Free Introduction course Tandem Endorsements Sales and service

Dealer for Advance Charly Flytec Icom Adventure Plus Paragliding Pty Ltd Stanwell Park, Sydney Ph: 0412271404 <fly@adventureplusparagliding.com.au> [www.adventureplusparagliding.com.au]

48 Soaring Australia

SparrowHawk GC ready for launch at Tehachapi, California Photo: Morgan Sandercock

Western Australia

Australia Wide Services HGFA Approved Paraglider Testing & Repairs

Advertising Index – January 2011 • C omprehensive testing and repairs to all paragliders • Fully equipped service and repair agents for: Advance, Aerodyne, Airwave, Bio-Air, Gin, Gradient, Mac Para, Niviuk, Nova, Ozone, Paratech, Sky, Swing, UP • Full written report • Harness repair and modifications • Certified Australasian Gradient Repair Centre • Parachute repacking • Orders taken from anywhere in Australia, New Zealand and Asia • Prompt turnaround PARAGLIDING REPAIR CENTRE

Paragliding Repair Centre 93 Princess Ave, Torndirrup, Albany WA 6330 Mob: 0417 776550 Email: <fly@waparagliding.com> Web: [www.waparagliding.com]

Airborne IBC Airsports Team 5 41 Airtime Products 19 Amy’s Aviation 5 Eco Watch 15 GFA Form 2 42 Gradient Paragliders 17 HGFA Merchandise 3 Keepit Soaring 43 Manilla PG – Accessories 11 Microair Avionics 7 OAMPS 23 Paragliding Headquarters 17 Poliglide.com 35 Poliglide Paramotors 9 Rediscover the 55 5 Ride The Spiral 33 SportAviation PL 43 Swift Avionics IBC

January 2011



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